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Romance on the Orient Express Books in Order

Part ofJennifer Moore Books in Order

Explore Romance on the Orient Express, including Jennifer Moore’s entry, with book order, summaries, series notes, and where-to-start help.

Last updated: June 7, 2026

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Wrong Train to Paris

by Jennifer Moore

2020

After a rash bid for independence, Julia Weston boards the wrong train and ends up stranded in rural Provence. Waiting for the next train, she discovers unexpected warmth, hard choices, and a growing bond with farmer Luc Paquet.

Series background & context

Romance on the Orient Express is a multi-author historical romance series built around one very appealing idea, love stories set against the glamour and motion of European rail travel. These books take place around the turn of the twentieth century, when long-distance train journeys could feel both luxurious and unpredictable. Stations, sleeping cars, missed connections, and sudden detours do a lot of the work that a ballroom or country estate might do in another kind of romance.

The nice thing about the series is that the books are linked by mood and setting rather than by one ongoing cast. Each novel follows a different couple, so you do not need to commit to a long shared plot. What carries across the series is the feeling of being in transit, with strangers thrown together, time running short, and whole futures shifting between one city and the next.

That structure makes the series a good fit for stand-alone reading. It Started in Budapest, Wrong Train to Paris, Until Vienna, and Song of Salzburg all use the train route and the wider European journey as their connective tissue. Jennifer Moore's Wrong Train to Paris is a great example of the setup at its best. A young woman ends up on the wrong train, gets stranded in Provence, and has just a few days to rethink what she wants before ordinary life resumes.

Because the books are short historical romances, they tend to move quickly. There is room for local color, travel mishaps, cultural differences, and the dreamy appeal of seeing Europe through fresh eyes, but the series never forgets that the real hook is emotional. These are stories about brief windows of time, unexpected intimacy, and choices made while the train is still moving.

The tone is generally warm, gentle, and escapist, with enough uncertainty to keep things lively. You are here for charming settings, constrained circumstances, and couples who might never have met if travel had gone exactly to plan. That makes the series especially good for readers who like romance with a built-in ticking clock.

There is no single mandatory starting point, so you can pick the destination that sounds best. If you want Jennifer Moore's contribution, Wrong Train to Paris is an easy entry. If you end up enjoying the shared atmosphere, the rest of the series is simple to dip into one stop at a time.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

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All 1 Romance on the Orient Express Books in Order (2026)