Windham Sisters Books in Order
Part ofGrace Burrowes Books in OrderFind the Windham Sisters books by Grace Burrowes in order, with summaries, series background, and where to start with the Duke of Moreland’s daughters.
Last updated: January 13, 2026
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Publication Order
7 books
Jonathan and Amy
by Grace Burrowes
2014
Jonathan and Amy are finally on the same page, or so they think. This shorter story follows them through a fresh complication that tests their communication and their confidence. It’s a gentle look at what comes after the big declaration.
Morgan and Archer
by Grace Burrowes
2013
A short romance about two people who have been circling each other for years. When circumstances force an honest conversation, Morgan and Archer discover that the future they feared might be the one they want.
Lady Jenny's Christmas Portrait
by Grace Burrowes
2013
When Lady Jenny Windham agrees to sit for a Christmas portrait, she expects boredom and social rules. Instead, the artist she hires pushes her to be honest, and the season becomes a test of courage, desire, and family expectations.
Lady Eve's Indiscretion
by Grace Burrowes
2013
Lady Eve Windham is tired of being treated as the “difficult” sister. When an indiscretion threatens her independence, she has to work with the one man who refuses to flatter her. Their bargain turns into a hard-earned partnership.
Lady Maggie's Secret Scandal
by Grace Burrowes
2012
Lady Maggie Windham’s private letters are stolen, and blackmail follows close behind. With her family hovering, she turns to a discreet investigator for help. As the search tightens, Maggie must choose between safety, truth, and love.
Lady Louisa's Christmas Knight
by Grace Burrowes
2012
Lady Louisa Windham expects a polite holiday season, not a man who turns her world sideways. A Christmas house party brings old expectations to the surface, and Louisa finds herself tempted by a “knight” who sees past her title.
Lady Sophie's Christmas Wish
by Grace Burrowes
2011
Caught in a blizzard, Lady Sophie Windham ends up caring for an abandoned baby alongside a complete stranger. The teamwork is awkward, then surprisingly sweet, and by the time Christmas arrives, Sophie has to decide what she truly wants.
Series background & context
Windham Sisters focuses on the daughters of the Duke and Duchess of Moreland, a family that treats matchmaking like a competitive sport. These books are Regency romances with a lot of heart, plenty of sibling banter, and the comforting sense that no one in this family will ever let you face trouble alone, even if you wish they would.
Each story puts one sister in the spotlight and gives her a problem that can’t be solved by being polite. Sometimes the trouble is public, like a brewing scandal or a blackmailer with leverage. Sometimes it’s private, like grief, fear of being trapped, or the exhaustion of living up to a role that no longer fits. Burrowes is good at letting her heroines be complicated, and at letting them want love without turning them into people-pleasers.
The holiday entries are especially cozy. In Lady Sophie’s Christmas Wish, a snowstorm and an abandoned baby force Sophie into teamwork with a stranger, and feelings show up fast. Lady Louisa’s Christmas Knight and Lady Jenny’s Christmas Portrait keep that winter warmth while still taking the characters’ choices seriously, using celebrations and family gatherings as pressure points rather than just pretty scenery.
Not every Windham sister is easy to manage, and that’s part of the fun.
Lady Maggie’s Secret Scandal leans into investigation and blackmail, while Lady Eve’s Indiscretion is for readers who like a heroine who refuses to be sweet just to make other people comfortable. Shorter add-on stories like Morgan and Archer can be read as extra time with the wider cast, especially if you enjoy checking in on couples once the big decisions are made.
Even though each book stands alone, the sisters’ relationships build from story to story. You’ll see parents trying to help, siblings trying to interfere, and friends quietly keeping score. Reading in order makes the family moments land harder.
These books are linked by family, not by cliffhangers, so you can dip in, but reading in order makes the relationships richer. Expect smart heroines, heroes who have to earn trust, and a strong undercurrent of tenderness beneath all the teasing and scheming.
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