Regency Spies of London Books in Order
Part ofMelanie Dickerson Books in OrderSee Melanie Dickerson's Regency Spies of London books in order, with quick summaries, series background, and simple reading guidance.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
A Spy's Devotion
by Melanie Dickerson
2016
Recovering officer Nicholas Langdon returns home with a dead soldier's coded diary and steps into a world of treason. As he investigates, Julia Grey becomes both a suspect by association and the ally he cannot ignore.
A Dangerous Engagement
by Melanie Dickerson
2017
Felicity Mayson arrives at a country house expecting courtship and finds herself inside a revolutionary plot instead. To help agent Philip McDowell uncover the truth, she must pretend to be engaged to the wrong man while falling for the right one.
A Viscount's Proposal
by Melanie Dickerson
2017
After a carriage accident leaves them alone together, rebellious Leorah Langdon and proper Viscount Withinghall are pushed toward scandal. Then they learn the crash was sabotage, and their uneasy partnership turns into something far riskier.
Series background & context
In the Regency Spies of London books, Melanie Dickerson trades medieval castles for ballrooms, drawing rooms, and political whispers. Publicly, this is a world of manners, titles, and careful conversation. Privately, it is full of coded papers, sabotage, treason, and people who are never quite who they seem. That mix gives the series a different energy from her fairy-tale novels. It is sharper, more suspicious, and more tied to national danger.
The first book, A Spy's Devotion, sets the tone well. An injured officer returns home with a coded diary and gets pulled into a plot that reaches into one of England's most powerful households. After that, A Viscount's Proposal uses a social scandal and a sabotaged carriage to bring two stubborn opposites together, while A Dangerous Engagement turns a country house courtship into a cover story for exposing revolutionaries. Each book has its own couple and central mystery, but the same atmosphere runs through all three.
What makes the series work is the constant tension between what society expects and what the characters actually need to do. A woman may have to protect her reputation at the exact moment she should be asking hard questions. A gentleman may need to look calm and respectable while quietly chasing down traitors. Dickerson has fun with that contrast. The clothes are elegant. The stakes are not.
These are romances, but they are also investigations. Clues matter. Family influence matters. So do secrecy, timing, and knowing when to trust the wrong-looking person over the right-looking one. The heroes tend to be disciplined men with public responsibilities. The heroines are smart, stubborn, and more useful to the outcome than anyone first assumes. The books stay clean and hopeful, but they move with the beat of suspense.
It is a polished world on the surface.
Underneath, it is all hidden danger, wounded pride, and people making quick decisions in rooms full of rules. If you like historical romance with more plot than tea-table banter, this series lands in a nice middle space. The books connect through shared circles and a common mood, but they are easy to read one at a time. Expect witty friction, real peril, and endings that feel romantic without losing the spy story on the way there.
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