Sons and Daughters Books in Order
Part ofLorraine Heath Books in OrderThis page lists the Sons and Daughters books by Lorraine Heath in order, with story summaries, series background, and where this multi-author contemporary line fits her romance universe.
Last updated: January 13, 2026
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Publication Order
1 book
The Ladies' Man
by Lorraine Heath
1995
Known for breaking hearts, a charming ladies' man suddenly finds his easy flirtations mean little to a woman who has no interest in becoming another conquest. Forced into close contact, they both confront old wounds and the risk of a real commitment.
Series background & context
The Sons and Daughters line is a contemporary romance miniseries built around grown children finding their own way in life and love. Each book is written to stand alone, but they share an interest in family legacies, small communities, and the moment when an adult child finally steps out of a parent's shadow.
Lorraine Heath's contribution centers on a man whose easy charm has always earned him the label of ladies' man. He's used to being the fun choice, the temporary fling, the one no one expects to stick. When circumstances push him back into close contact with people he once hurt, he has to face the gap between the image he projects and the person he actually wants to be.
His heroine is not impressed by reputation. She has responsibilities of her own and little patience for a flirt who treats commitment like a joke. But as they are thrown together by family obligations and old promises, she starts to see flashes of sincerity beneath his practiced grin. He, in turn, realizes that this is not another casual entanglement. To win her trust he has to stay, listen, and take real risks.
The broader Sons and Daughters concept often brings siblings and extended families into the frame. Weddings, holidays, and neighborhood gatherings give characters space to clash and connect. Readers meet parents who made their own choices decades earlier and now watch their children navigate very different romantic landscapes.
The tone is modern but not cynical. These books are less about high drama than about the quieter ways people disappoint and then surprise each other. A character might be juggling work stress, coparenting with an ex, or caring for aging parents while trying to figure out whether to give love a second chance.
For fans of Lorraine Heath's historicals, this series shows how her feel for emotional nuance translates into a contemporary Texas or small‑town setting. You still get her hallmark themes of forgiveness, second chances, and people learning to see past gossip and assumptions. You just trade the ballroom and the ranch for coffee shops, front porches, and late‑night phone calls.
Reading her Sons and Daughters title is a good way to test whether you enjoy her voice in a modern context. It stands on its own, but the familiar focus on wounded hearts and hard‑earned trust will feel right at home to anyone who followed her cowboys or dukes.
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