Silver Valley Books in Order
Part ofJoanna Wylde Books in OrderBrowse the Silver Valley books by Joanna Wylde in order, with short summaries, series background, connected titles, and where to start help.
Last updated: June 8, 2026
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Publication Order
1 book
Silver Bastard
by Joanna Wylde
2015
Puck Redhouse once wrecked Becca's life and saved it in the same night. Five years later, when the past drags her back, the Silver Bastards biker may be the only person she can trust.
Series background & context
Silver Valley is Joanna Wylde's spinoff from the Reapers world, but it has its own feel. The books shift attention to the Silver Bastards MC, a connected club based in Callup, Idaho. The bikers are still rough, possessive, and loyal, yet the series feels more tied to town history, old families, and the weight of place. It sits close to Reapers MC, but it is not just more of the same.
In Silver Bastard, that tone shows up right away through Puck Redhouse and Becca Jones. Their story begins with a night that both ruins and saves Becca, then jumps forward five years, when the past forces them back together. That mix of danger, protection, bad history, and second chances is a big part of what the series is doing. Even when the romance is intense, the books never let you forget that earlier choices keep echoing.
The town matters almost as much as the bikers.
Silver Valley is real northern Idaho mining country, and that history gives the series a different texture. This is a place shaped by mines, labor, disasters, booms, busts, and long memories. In Wylde's hands, that means the setting feels older and more layered than a generic small-town backdrop. People know each other's parents. Neighbors remember what happened years ago. Trouble does not blow in from nowhere, it grows out of families, local grudges, and the kinds of secrets communities carry for a long time.
The Silver Bastards themselves are connected to the larger Reapers world, but they are not overshadowed by it. They have their own club politics, their own scars, and their own way of handling the line between family and business. Reapers and Bastards helps fill in more of that world, especially through Charming Bastard, which looks at Callup and its people from a more local angle. Together, the books build a setting where biker loyalty and hometown history are tangled up with each other.
Compared with Reapers MC, Silver Valley feels a little more intimate and a little more haunted by the past. The stories are still steamy and still willing to get rough, but they spend extra time on memory, community, and what it means to belong to a place you may also want to escape. That makes the series a good choice for readers who like connected MC romance but want a stronger sense of town, history, and people who cannot quite outrun where they came from.
It is also a nice bridge for readers who love the Reapers books and want more of Joanna Wylde's Idaho world without losing the grit. The club is different, the scars are different, and the town has its own pull. But the core draw is familiar, dangerous people, fierce loyalty, and love stories that have to fight their way through old damage before they can become something solid.
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