Savannah Heirs Books in Order
Part ofRaven Kennedy Books in OrderFind the Savannah Heirs books by Raven Kennedy in order, with short summaries, series background, and where-to-start help for this dark romance trilogy.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
Cruel
by Raven Kennedy
2019
In Savannah, power belongs to the Heirs, and Scarlett is tangled up in all of them, especially Rogue Kelly. Once her closest friends, they turned vicious, and escaping them may be harder than surviving their cruelty.
Tame
by Raven Kennedy
2019
Godfrey Taylor carries violence, family pressure, and a temper he barely trusts. Rachel Nomar should be another problem to solve, but instead she becomes the one person who makes him want something gentler.
Wild
by Raven Kennedy
2019
Royal Taylor is hiding blood on her hands and feelings she should not have, especially for Luis Salvador. Their connection promises freedom, but Savannah is full of secrets and the past is closing in fast.
Series background & context
Savannah Heirs is one of Kennedy’s darker contemporary projects, written with Coralee June and set far away from fae courts and shifter packs. The power here is money, family reputation, and the kind of old influence that can make a whole city feel rigged. Savannah, Georgia is not just scenery in these books. Its wealth, gossip, social rules, and family hierarchies keep pressure on everyone in the story.
Cruel opens with Scarlett and the Heirs, the group of rich boys who once felt like home and now feel like a trap. Rogue Kelly stands at the center of that first romance, but the larger pull is the whole pack of power around him. The book leans hard into bully romance territory, so affection and cruelty live side by side, and Scarlett’s big question is not just who loves her, but why the people closest to her turned on her in the first place.
The next two books widen the map while staying in the same emotional neighborhood. Tame turns to Godfrey Taylor and Rachel Nomar, where family violence, hidden bruises, and the possibility of healing sit right beside the romance. Wild follows Royal Taylor and Luis Salvador, bringing in forbidden attraction and a past that will not stay quiet. Together, the three books show different corners of the same privileged, ugly, magnetic world.
Nobody in this trilogy gets an easy love story.
What links the books is not only the setting or the families. It is the feeling that everyone is carrying something dangerous, money, secrets, trauma, loyalty, guilt, or desire that would look unacceptable in daylight. These are not gentle romances. They are dark, emotional, and full of people making bad calls for reasons that still make a kind of sense from the inside. If you like cleaner heroes and safer worlds, this probably will not be your series.
But if you do like contemporary romance with bite, this trilogy has a strong identity. The city feels humid and close. The families feel overinvolved. The relationships are intense, possessive, and messy. Even when the focus changes from one couple to the next, the books keep feeding the same sense that Savannah’s elite world is always watching, always closing ranks, and always ready to punish weakness.
Read these in order, starting with Cruel. Each book centers a different pairing, but the family connections and shared history hit better when you see the whole web form from the beginning.
Edited by
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