The London List Books in Order
Part ofMaggie Robinson Books in OrderSee the London List books in order by Maggie Robinson, with quick summaries, series background, reading order, and simple where-to-start advice.
Last updated: June 8, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
Lord Gray's List
by Maggie Robinson
2012
Evangeline Ramsey runs London's most deliciously improper scandal sheet while disguised as a man. Lord Benton Gray means to shut it down, until he learns who is behind it and finds himself drawn back to her. ([kensingtonbooks.com](https://www.kensingtonbooks.com/shop/fiction/romance/romantic-comedy/lord-grays-list-epub/?utm_source=openai))
Captain Durant's Countess
by Maggie Robinson
2013
Maris, Countess of Kelby, needs an heir before her husband's grasping nephew takes everything. Captain Reynold Durant accepts an outrageous assignment, but duty soon gives way to real feeling and a far trickier choice. ([kensingtonbooks.com](https://www.kensingtonbooks.com/shop/fiction/romance/romantic-comedy/captain-durants-countess-epub/?utm_source=openai))
Lady Anne’s Lover
by Maggie Robinson
2013
Notorious Lady Imaculata Anne Egremont answers one of the paper's job notices and vanishes into Wales as plain Anne Mont. Major Gareth Ripton-Jones needs a housekeeper, not romance, but Anne brings chaos and hope in equal measure. ([kensingtonbooks.com](https://www.kensingtonbooks.com/shop/fiction/romance/romantic-comedy/lady-annes-lover-epub/?utm_source=openai))
Series background & context
The London List books spin out from a delicious premise: a scandal sheet that everybody reads and nobody respectable would publicly admit enjoying. The paper trades in gossip, discreet ads, matchmaking, and the kinds of stories a proper publication would never print. That gives the series its energy from the start, because every romance begins with reputation already on the line and privacy is always one bad paragraph away from collapse. (kensingtonbooks.com)
In these books, information is power. (kensingtonbooks.com)
The first novel, Lord Gray's List, introduces Evangeline Ramsey, who created and publishes The London List while living publicly as a man so she can work and move about more freely. Her long-running clash with Lord Benton Gray sets the tone for the series, witty, improper, and very aware of how completely public image shapes private life. The paper itself feels almost like a character, one that can ruin a name, spark a meeting, or hand someone an unexpected chance. (kensingtonbooks.com)
The later books use the paper's reach in clever ways. In Captain Durant's Countess, an unusual ad leads Maris, Countess of Kelby, and Captain Reynold Durant into an arrangement meant to secure an heir and save an estate. In Lady Anne's Lover, Lady Imaculata Anne Egremont escapes her own notoriety by answering a job posting and reinventing herself as plain Anne Mont, housekeeper to wounded Major Gareth Ripton-Jones in Wales. Both stories grow out of the List's habit of turning private need into public opportunity. (kensingtonbooks.com)
What ties the series together is its fascination with performance. Characters disguise themselves, reinvent themselves, or bargain with scandal instead of pretending they can outrun it. The List sits at the center like a matchmaker with ink-stained hands, exposing hypocrisy while also giving people one more chance to choose a different life. Robinson clearly enjoys the tension between what society says it wants and what people actually need. (kensingtonbooks.com)
Expect playful historical romance with a little bite. These books are sexy, funny, and full of social maneuvering, but there is also a real affection for people who do not fit neatly into the roles London has assigned them. That mix of gossip and heart is the whole appeal of The London List. (kensingtonbooks.com)
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
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