The Devil's Own Books in Order
Part ofAmo Jones Books in OrderBrowse The Devil's Own series by Amo Jones in order, with book lists, MC and black ops summaries, world background, and pointers on how it crosses into her other series.
Last updated: December 26, 2025
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Publication Order
3 books
The Devil's Match
by Amo Jones
2018
In the finale of The Devil’s Own, a cold blooded enforcer who has given everything to The Army meets the one woman he cannot treat as just another asset. Their collision drags old plots into the open and asks whether monsters are allowed a future.
One Hundred & Thirty-Six Scars
by Amo Jones
2016
Meadow has survived the kind of childhood that leaves scars carved into skin and soul. Beast, a killer shaped by a secret military program, crashes into her life with ruthless intent, and together they fight a war against their pasts while falling into a jagged love.
Hellraiser
by Amo Jones
2016
Melissa Hart has always believed certain moments define you, and meeting Braxton “Hella” Ward is one of hers. He is a weapon built by The Army, she is the woman who sees past the legend, and their enemies to lovers story leaves collateral damage everywhere they turn.
Series background & context
The Devil’s Own series is where Amo Jones leans into military style training, covert operations, and the kind of trauma that turns kids into weapons. The core of the world is an organisation known only as The Army, a program that scoops up broken or disposable children and hammers them into human instruments. Many of the men we meet here have already appeared in the Sinful Souls MC books or later show up in Westbeach and The Dark Outlaw, but this is where you see what made them.
It starts with One Hundred & Thirty Six Scars, a book that introduces Meadow, a woman covered in the physical reminders of years of abuse, and Beast, the soldier who becomes both her saviour and her sharpest edge. Their romance is gritty and often uncomfortable, full of nightmares, flashbacks, and the slow process of learning that you can be loved without being used. Through them, readers get a clearer picture of The Army’s compound, its leaders, and the dangerous network it feeds.
Hellraiser shifts the spotlight to Melissa Hart and Braxton “Hella” Ward. Melissa has grown up in a religious bubble, then been spat out into a life that makes very little sense. Hella, who fans will later recognise in Westbeach and The Dark Outlaw, is her opposite: raised on the streets, recruited into The Army, and then unleashed as a walking storm. Their story is enemies to lovers in the most literal way, fuelled by resentment, desire, and a shared history of being turned into tools.
The heart of the series for many readers is the Razing Grace duet. Millie Hart, who once planned to spend her life as a nun, is ripped out of her quiet world by nightmares that begin to seep into reality. Tripp, known as Raze, leads a team of masked huntsmen and has been crafted into the Army’s perfect executioner. Together they unravel a web of corruption that runs from religious institutions to violent underground networks, all while negotiating a connection that should never have been possible.
The final book, The Devil’s Match, ties a bow—if a bloodstained one—on the loose ends. It looks at what happens when one of The Army’s most loyal assets meets a woman who forces him to question every order he has ever taken. The story digs into themes of free will, guilt, and whether people who have done unforgivable things are allowed to want more than survival.
Across The Devil’s Own you can expect brutal training sequences, morally dubious rescues, and a rotating cast of damaged characters who keep choosing each other anyway. The series should be read in order, both for plot clarity and emotional impact. It is also a key bridge between the biker focused Sinful Souls books and the later Westbeach and Dark Outlaw stories, showing how one closed off program sent ripples through the rest of Jones’s universe.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

















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