The Blue Orchid Society Books in Order
Part ofJennifer Moore Books in OrderSee the Blue Orchid Society books by Jennifer Moore in order, with short summaries, series background, and quick help choosing where to start.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
5 books
Emmeline
by Jennifer Moore
2020
Suffragette Emmeline and the traditional Lord Mather clash over women's rights, then end up at the same house party. Their sharp debate turns personal as both face money troubles, pride, and a very inconvenient attraction.
Solving Sophronia
by Jennifer Moore
2020
Society columnist Lady Sophronia wants to be a real investigative reporter, not just a gossip writer. When she inserts herself into a murder case, she clashes with Detective Jonathan Graham and risks far more than her reputation.
Inventing Vivian
by Jennifer Moore
2021
Scientist Vivian Kirby gains an anonymous champion for her research after Lord Benedict returns from China determined to make amends. Letters, a murder inquiry, and mistaken identity leave her torn between two men who are really one.
Healing Hazel
by Jennifer Moore
2022
Hazel longs to nurse the wounded, but panic from childhood trauma has always stopped her. When war in Spain throws her into a hospital beside wary Dr. Jim Jackson, service becomes her path toward healing and love.
Educating Elizabeth
by Jennifer Moore
2023
Elizabeth Miller dreams of opening a school for poor girls, but money trouble drives her to accept help from the last man she wants near her. Lord Charles Chatsworth seems frivolous, until sabotage and shared work reveal his deeper character.
Series background & context
The Blue Orchid Society is Jennifer Moore's Victorian series about friendship, ambition, and women trying to build lives that are bigger than the roles society has planned for them. The books begin with a chance meeting during the Season, when several young women escape a dull social event and start talking honestly about what they actually want. Out of that conversation comes a private pact, a support system, and the beginning of a sisterhood.
That shared promise is what holds the series together. These women are not all chasing the same thing, and that is what makes the books fun. One wants to be a real reporter, not just a gossip writer. Another is serious about science. Another wants to nurse the wounded. Another wants to run a school. In Emmeline, which works as a prelude to the series, questions about women's rights and social change are already on the table. Then Solving Sophronia, Inventing Vivian, Healing Hazel, and Educating Elizabeth each follow a different woman as she pushes toward work that matters to her.
The setting matters a lot here. Victorian London is not just wallpaper. It shapes everything, from who can move freely to who gets believed, funded, or respected. Some books stay close to society drawing rooms and newspaper offices, while others move into laboratories, hospitals, and the East End. Healing Hazel even widens the map beyond London and drops its heroine into the chaos of war in Spain. Moore uses those settings to show how much courage it takes for these women to claim space for themselves.
There is usually a romance at the center of each book, but the ongoing heartbeat of the series is female friendship. The women of the Blue Orchid Society cheer each other on, share resources, and quietly make room for one another's talents. That means the series has a lovely sense of continuity even though each novel focuses on a different couple. You are not just watching one relationship grow. You are watching a whole circle of women become braver because they are no longer standing alone.
The tone is clean, smart, and warmly written. These are historical romances, but they often carry a touch of mystery or suspense as well, murder investigations, sabotage, dangerous travel, or professional risks that feel genuinely important. The stakes are emotional and practical at the same time, which keeps the books grounded.
If you like series built around found family, this one is easy to recommend. Read in order if you can, because the friendships deepen from book to book. Start with Emmeline for the broader social mood, or go straight to Solving Sophronia if you want the clearest introduction to the Society itself.
Edited by
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