St. Louis Cyclones Books in Order
Part ofAlexandria House Books in OrderSee the St. Louis Cyclones books by Alexandria House in order, with quick summaries, series background, and where to start with this basketball romance line.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
Flagrant
by Alexandria House
2021
NBA star Paul Polo Logan is ready to stop playing games, but Kendra Doll knows their shared past can wound as easily as it binds. This is a basketball romance where history matters as much as chemistry.
Technical
by Alexandria House
2021
Drayveon Walker seems to have everything under control until Stevie October crashes into his life. Their bond forms fast, and the question is whether a connection that sudden can also be real.
Personal
by Alexandria House
2022
Armand Daniels has talent, trouble, and a temper that makes him both an asset and a risk. Ella McClain wants less spotlight, not more, but their unlikely connection burns too hot to ignore.
Series background & context
The St. Louis Cyclones books are Alexandria House's basketball romances, but they are not heavy on play by play or sports trivia. The real focus is on what life around a pro team does to people, the pressure, the fame, the trades, the public image, and the private damage that does not stay hidden for long.
Basketball gives the books pressure.
Flagrant follows Paul Polo Logan and Kendra Doll, two people bound together by history as much as attraction. Technical moves to Drayveon Walker and Stevie October, where the connection is almost instant even if the timing feels wild. Personal centers Armand Daniels, the talented and troubled bad boy of the NBA, and Ella McClain, who is trying to step back from the glare of public attention.
What makes the series work is that the team gives it structure, but emotion gives it weight. These are athletes with real problems, anger, old hurt, family expectations, and reputations that can get ahead of them. The women in their lives are not props for a sports fantasy. They have their own fears, limits, and reasons for hesitating.
House also links the Cyclones books to the wider universe in satisfying ways. Characters know each other, earlier stories echo into later ones, and the McClain connection gives the whole thing extra texture. That means the books can stand alone, but they feel richer in order because the history keeps building.
The tone mixes heat with real emotional cleanup. These stories can be glamorous, but they are rarely easy. If you like sports romance where the city, the team, and the public spotlight matter, but the biggest question is still whether two people can trust each other enough to stay, the Cyclones series is a strong fit.
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