The Roark Brothers Trilogy Books in Order
Part ofNatasha Knight Books in OrderSee the Roark Brothers trilogy by Natasha Knight in order, with descriptions, series background, and notes on its domestic-discipline themes and connected standalones.
Last updated: January 12, 2026
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Publication Order
2 books
Taming Megan
by Natasha Knight
2014
Megan adores her steady, old fashioned husband, but bad habits and bad influences keep pulling her off course. When her reckless choices threaten their marriage, Jake’s uncompromising brand of domestic discipline becomes both her punishment and her anchor.
Taming Emma
by Natasha Knight
2013
Emma has always craved the safety of surrender, and Jake Roark is the man who finally offers it. Their marriage blends love with firm discipline, forcing Emma to confront her past while learning what it really means to be tamed by choice.
Series background & context
The Roark Brothers Trilogy showcases Natasha Knight’s earlier domestic discipline style in a contemporary setting. These books focus less on organized crime and more on marriages, second chances, and couples who agree that structure and spanking have a place in their relationships.
Taming Emma introduces readers to the Roark family. Emma has always been curious about submission and about Jake Roark, the man who eventually becomes her husband. Their story is about trust and about learning how far they are willing to go in blending love with discipline.
Taming Megan shifts to Jake’s brother and his wife, Megan. On the surface they have an enviable marriage: he is handsome and steady, she is devoted and a little wild. When old habits and bad influences start pulling Megan back toward self destructive choices, the rules they agreed on when they wed come into play. The book looks closely at low self worth, the need for boundaries, and how a firm hand can be both corrective and comforting when it is genuinely consensual.
The third book, often known as Taming Naia or Naia and the Professor, reaches back to an event from the past. Years ago, Naia’s accusation that her professor spanked her cost him his career. When she returns to ask his forgiveness, he agrees only on the condition that she accept the punishment she once falsely claimed. What begins as atonement becomes something deeper as they confront the truths about what happened and what they both really want.
Compared with Knight’s later mafia and secret society romances, the Roark books are smaller scale. The stakes are emotional rather than life or death, and most of the action takes place in homes, bedrooms, and familiar domestic spaces.
They still carry her signatures, though: flawed characters, explicit heat, and an insistence that even the most unconventional relationships must be built on communication and mutual choice. If you are curious about her roots in spanking romance before she moved fully into dark mafia territory, this trilogy is the place to look.
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