Rose Hill Books in Order
Part ofElsie Silver Books in OrderExplore the Rose Hill books by Elsie Silver in order, with short summaries, family connections, and help choosing where to start in the series.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
Wild Eyes
by Elsie Silver
2024
Country star Skylar Stone escapes bad press and finds unexpected calm in Rose Hill, until irresistible single dad Weston Belmont ruins her plan to lie low. Their connection is easy, but her public life keeps threatening the peace they've found.
Wild Love
by Elsie Silver
2024
Ford Grant Jr. returns to Rose Hill to open a studio and unexpectedly becomes father to a twelve-year-old daughter. The last complication he needs is Rosie Belmont, his best friend's sister, back in town and under his skin.
Wild Card
by Elsie Silver
2025
A missed connection turns into a very awkward second chance when Gwen ends up living with Sebastian Rousseau, the gruff fire pilot she never forgot and her ex-boyfriend's father. Wanting him is messy. Sharing a roof makes it worse.
Wild Side
by Elsie Silver
2025
When her nephew's guardianship is challenged, Tabitha agrees to marry brooding Rhys Dupris to keep the child in Rose Hill. Living together forces them past old anger and toward a love neither one planned for.
Series background & context
Rose Hill is Elsie Silver's lake-town series, set in a rugged mountain community where family ties are tight, privacy is thin, and adulthood keeps arriving in messy, unexpected forms. The books are linked by a circle of fathers and father figures, though not all of them fit the same mold. Some are biological dads. Some step into care through guardianship or sheer circumstance. That gives the series a warmer, more domestic thread, even when the romantic tension gets complicated fast.
Wild Love opens the town with Ford Grant Jr. and Rosie Belmont. Ford comes back to Rose Hill to build a recording studio and ends up facing a second shock at the same time, a twelve-year-old daughter he never expected. Rosie, his best friend's younger sister, becomes impossible to avoid, and that mix of old history and new responsibility sets the tone for the whole series. Rose Hill romances tend to ask what happens when attraction collides with real life, not just desire.
The town itself does a lot of work.
It has lake docks, mountain views, family property, local businesses, and just enough distance from city life to feel like a reset button for people who badly need one. Wild Eyes leans into that escape. Skylar Stone arrives worn down by fame and bad press, only to run into Weston Belmont, a horse trainer, a flirt, and a single dad with two children who are impossible not to love. The book keeps one foot in celebrity fallout and the other in small-town comfort.
Wild Side takes a sharper turn, using contested guardianship and a marriage of convenience to throw Tabitha and Rhys Dupris into close quarters. Then Wild Card closes the run with Sebastian Rousseau, a fire pilot, and Gwen, the woman he cannot quite leave in the past. Across all four books, the big recurring ideas are responsibility, chosen family, grief, healing, and the question of whether home is something you inherit or something you build.
There is also a nice thread connecting Rose Hill back to Silver's other books. Readers coming from Chestnut Springs will spot familiar family links, but Rose Hill stands comfortably on its own. The vibe is a little softer and more lakeside than her ranch series, but it still has her usual mix of heat, humor, and emotionally guarded people getting found out. If you want small-town romance with kids in the picture, strong community feel, and couples who have to make room for love in already busy lives, Rose Hill is probably the best place to land.
Edited by
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