Wall Street Royals Books in Order
Part ofTara Sue Me Books in OrderSee the Wall Street Royals books in order by Tara Sue Me, with quick summaries, series background, and help choosing the best place to start.
Last updated: June 8, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
Big Swinging D
by Tara Sue Me
2019
Maggie Warren crashes into Isaac Gregory and wrecks his perfect suit, then ends up working as his assistant. Their opposites-attract chemistry is instant, but control freak Isaac is not prepared for the chaos Maggie brings.
FOK
by Tara Sue Me
2019
Wall Street trader Lance Braxton meets gifted violinist Celeste Walsh while judging a scholarship audition for his grandmother. Attraction hits fast, but Celeste soon learns Lance expects total honesty, total commitment, and nothing halfway.
All or None
by Tara Sue Me
2021
The final Wall Street Royals romance throws another control-driven finance king into a situation that refuses to stay neat or professional. Desire raises the stakes, and love demands more than half measures.
Series background & context
Wall Street Royals takes the usual romance fantasy of powerful, highly controlled men and pushes it straight into finance. These books are built around men at the top of their game, people who are used to making fast decisions, reading risk, and treating control like oxygen. Then love shows up and ruins the system in the best possible way.
The series opens with FOK, a title pulled from trading language and a good clue to the mood of the whole set. Lance Braxton lives by an all-or-nothing philosophy, and the romance works because Celeste Walsh does not fit into his life as neatly as he expects. She is a musician with big talent and limited options, and their story mixes wealth, ambition, desire, and a power imbalance that does not stay simple for long.
Big Swinging D shifts to Isaac Gregory, another Wall Street heavyweight, and gives him exactly the kind of woman he is least built to handle. Maggie Warren is scattered, funny, impulsive, and nothing like the polished people Isaac normally surrounds himself with. That contrast gives the book a looser, livelier feel. He is structure. She is chaos. The fun is in watching how quickly his carefully managed world stops behaving.
Then All or None closes the set by staying with the same basic series promise: another man who is excellent at command, another relationship that will not stay contained, and another reminder that the people who are most confident in the boardroom are often a lot less protected in private than they look.
The Wall Street setting matters more than just the titles. These books are full of money, pressure, image, and the weird intensity of people who have built their lives around winning. That gives the romances a sharper edge. The heroes are not simply rich. They are competitive, precise, and very used to getting what they want. When they meet women who challenge the rhythm of their lives, the result is not just attraction. It is disruption.
There are BDSM elements here too, but the series feels a little more compact and high-speed than Submissive. The books are shorter, punchier, and built to deliver a lot of chemistry fast. If you like alpha heroes, business-world glamour, and romances where control is always one emotional step away from collapse, Wall Street Royals does exactly what the title promises. These are people who know how to conquer markets. They are much less prepared for what happens when somebody gets past their defenses.
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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