Praise Me Daily Books in Order
Part ofJessa Kane Books in OrderBrowse the Praise Me Daily series by Jessa Kane in order, with summaries, trope tags, character notes and ideas on which praise filled novella to start with.
Last updated: December 25, 2025
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Publication Order
6 books
Praise Me: Soldier
by Jessa Kane
2025
July accidentally sits at the wrong restaurant table on her very first date and ends up across from Theo, a haunted soldier still wrestling with memories of a POW camp. Her sweetness quiets the noise in his head, and he quickly decides changing tables is not an option.
Praise Me: Princess
by Jessa Kane
2025
Decorated commander Conrad is ordered to guard a fragile princess whose country is splintering around her. She is soft spoken, traumatized and far more powerful than she feels, and his job quickly turns from security detail to being the only man she trusts to hold her together.
Praise Me: Priest
by Jessa Kane
2025
Father Rune has devoted his life to the church, but one encounter with Farrah, a starving thief caught stealing chocolate, rattles that resolve. Forced to prove his virtue under the eye of a suspicious superior, he keeps failing the test, because choosing holiness means losing her.
Praise Me: Pilot
by Jessa Kane
2025
When Haylo’s airline pilot father bails on sorority parents weekend, he sends his friend and co pilot Joel in his place with one rule, do not touch her. Meeting the lush, furious college girl in person makes that promise feel impossible, especially when she sets out to seduce him.
Praise Me: Lumberjack
by Jessa Kane
2025
Publicists chain Hollywood starlet Jenna to a tree, naked and shaking, to force a sultry rebrand. Penn, a massive single dad in flannel sent to cut that tree down, is the only one who sees her fear, and he will gladly blow up her image to make her feel safe instead.
Praise Me: President
by Jessa Kane
2024
Eloise only applied to the White House because war hero Pierce McAlister decided to run for office. Now she works down the hall from the youngest president in history, and the man she has idolized needs someone to worship him in private as fiercely as the country does in public.
Series background & context
Praise Me Daily is a series built around one simple fantasy, that the people who shoulder the most responsibility in public still crave private worship. Each novella hands a powerful or overburdened man his own personal cheerleader, a younger heroine who wants nothing more than to tell him how good he is and back that praise up with touch.
In Praise Me: President, Eloise is a policy nerd who has worked her whole life to earn a job in the White House. She also happens to be half in love with war hero Pierce McAlister, the youngest president in history. He is stern, lonely and exhausted by the constant weight of running a country. What begins as professional admiration turns into late nights in the Oval Office where she insists on being the one person who sees him not as Commander in Chief, but as a man who needs to be told he did well today.
Praise Me: Princess moves the focus overseas to a royal still reeling from civil unrest. Commander Conrad Larsen is assigned as bodyguard to a soft spoken princess whose country expects perfection even as it threatens to implode. She hides bruises and trauma under a careful public face. He hides feelings under military discipline. Locked together in palaces and safe houses, their bond tightens until it is impossible to tell where duty ends and devotion begins.
In Praise Me: Priest, Father Rune McDaniel has built an identity around self denial. He means to serve his church, keep his vows and avoid anything that might tempt him away from the narrow path he has chosen. Then he catches Farrah, a desperate young thief, stealing sweets in the marketplace. She pulls at him in ways that have nothing to do with charity. When his superior notices and sets out to test his resolve, Rune has to decide whether staying holy matters more than keeping the woman who makes him feel alive.
Praise Me: Soldier follows Theo, a former prisoner of war whose body made it home while his mind is still stuck in a cell. July sits down at the wrong restaurant table on her first ever date and finds herself face to face with a man who flinches at sudden movements but softens instantly for her. She may be naive, but her quiet determination to learn how to help him through panic and nightmares gives the story its heartbeat.
In Praise Me: Lumberjack, Hollywood star Jenna Fairchild is literally chained to a tree by her publicists in an attempt to rebrand her image. Penn, a massive single father and local logger, is supposed to cut that tree down. Instead, he is the only one on set who notices how frightened she is. He trades in his axe for a flannel wrapped rescue, hauling her away from the cameras to a small town life she never knew she wanted.
Finally, Praise Me: Pilot strands airline co pilot Joel at a sorority house parents weekend. His best friend and fellow pilot has bailed on his daughter, Haylo, yet again and sent Joel in his place with strict instructions to keep things appropriate. Haylo is furious and determined to use temptation as payback. Joel planned to follow orders. The reality of a curvy, starved for affection college student throwing herself at him makes that promise harder and harder to keep.
Taken together, the series shows off a slightly more grounded side of Jessa Kane. Yes, the setups are wild, but many scenes are simply about a soldier sleeping through the night for once, a president letting his shoulders drop, a single dad finally being told he is doing a good job. This page lays out how the books connect, what tropes they hit and which couple might be the right starting point if you want a heavy dose of verbal praise mixed with your high heat romance.
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