Secret Keepers Books in Order
Part ofJaymin Eve Books in OrderBrowse the Secret Keepers books by Jaymin Eve in order, with quick summaries, world notes, and straightforward help on where to start.
Last updated: June 10, 2026
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Publication Order
4 books
House of Darken
by Jaymin Eve
2018
Emma moves to Astoria and is warned never to cross the line that separates humans from the town's elites. When her guardians vanish, she breaks the rule and discovers Lexen Darken's side of the street hides a world that is not human at all.
House of Imperial
by Jaymin Eve
2018
Callie has spent her life moving and hiding because her mother swears supernatural beings are hunting her. In New Orleans, she learns those warnings were real, and whatever wants her has finally caught up.
House of Leights
by Jaymin Eve
2018
Maya has the perfect life on paper, but something has always felt missing. A violent ambush and a mysterious rescuer reveal that her ordinary human life is only part of a much bigger story.
House of Royale
by Jaymin Eve
2018
Avalon has always felt more at home with the ocean than with people. When Xander draws her into Royale, she glimpses the family and magic she has craved, but politics and a powerful stone threaten everything.
Series background & context
Secret Keepers feels like a paranormal romance series built around doors that should stay closed and the people who open them anyway. Each book introduces a different heroine, but the shared appeal is the same: ordinary life gives way to a hidden supernatural order, and nothing looks simple once the truth arrives.
The first step is usually the hardest.
In House of Darken, Emma crosses a line in Astoria that she has been warned never to cross and finds Lexen Darken's world waiting on the other side. House of Imperial shifts to Callie, whose mother has spent years dragging her from town to town while insisting that powerful beings are hunting her. House of Leights and House of Royale keep widening the pattern, each adding another heroine, another house, and another piece of the bigger conflict.
What links the books is not one shared protagonist but one shared idea: the human world sits beside something older, richer, and more dangerous. The ruling houses carry power, history, and secrets, and the women pulled into their orbit rarely get the full truth up front. That creates a nice blend of mystery, romance, and fantasy reveal.
The tone sits in that upper-YA to new-adult space where emotions run hot, the heroes are powerful and not always easy, and the setting keeps opening outward. By the time House of Royale arrives, the larger stakes around stones, shifting worlds, and long-running enemies are much clearer. The books start intimate and end much bigger.
If you like hidden societies, magical houses, and heroines who discover that the strange rules around them were there for a reason, Secret Keepers is a fun series to follow in order.
Edited by
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