P.S. Books in Order
Part ofMinka Kent Books in OrderBrowse the P.S. series by Minka Kent, written as Winter Renshaw, in order, with summaries, reading order, and quick where-to-start help.
Last updated: June 8, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
P.S. I Dare You
by Winter Renshaw
2018
A professional hired to help a reluctant billionaire heir navigate the family business discovers her new assignment wants nothing to do with her, or the empire waiting for him. Their mutual irritation quickly becomes something hotter.
P.S. I Hate You
by Winter Renshaw
2018
Maritza and Isaiah share one unforgettable week before his deployment and then keep each other alive through letters. When he abruptly goes silent and later acts like a stranger, the hurt cuts deeper than either expected.
P.S. I Miss You
by Winter Renshaw
2018
Melrose takes over her best friend's lease and immediately clashes with his insufferable roommate, Sutter. Their hate-to-love spark is strong enough on its own, then a confession lands and changes everything.
Series background & context
The P.S. series is built around communication, letters, notes, confessions, and all the things people find easier to say on paper than face to face. If you like romances where the emotional turn happens through messages as much as physical proximity, this is one of Winter Renshaw's best series to try.
The hook is right there in the title.
P.S. I Hate You starts with a waitress and a soldier who share a short stretch of real-life closeness, then keep the connection alive through letters until silence breaks it. That epistolary thread gives the romance a built-in ache before the reunion even begins. P.S. I Miss You changes the setup but keeps the tension high, using roommates, wrong assumptions, and one very inconvenient attraction to create a lighter but still emotional story. P.S. I Dare You pushes into workplace territory, pairing a capable heroine with a rich, resistant heir who does not want the future his father is trying to hand him.
The series is connected, but not in a way that makes it hard to follow. Each book gives you a full romance. The pleasure of reading them in order is catching the small links and seeing how the emotional style evolves.
What ties the books together is tone. These stories are warm, quick-moving, romantic, and just angsty enough to keep them from feeling too easy. The heroes have issues. The heroines usually have better judgment than the men. And the written word keeps nudging people into saying what they would rather avoid.
If you want a series that feels personal without being heavy, P.S. is a strong starting point. Begin with P.S. I Hate You if you want the fullest effect of the letters and connections.
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