Wingman Warriors Books in Order
Part ofCatherine Mann Books in OrderThis page lists the Wingman Warriors books by Catherine Mann in order, with quick summaries, team background, and simple series guidance.
Last updated: July 9, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
12 books
Grayson's Surrender
by Catherine Mann
2002
Flight surgeon Grayson Clark can face danger, but not the woman he never stopped wanting. A rescue mission and a vulnerable orphan force Grayson and Lori Rutledge to confront everything they once left unsaid.
Taking Cover
by Catherine Mann
2002
A military doctor who knows exactly how risky the job can be finds herself too close to a man she should have more distance from. Love proves more destabilizing than combat in this award-winning romance.
Anything, Anywhere, Anytime
by Catherine Mann
2003
Catherine Mann pairs military life with a romance that has to hold under impossible conditions. The title says it well, this is about commitment tested by movement, risk, and the demands of service.
Private Maneuvers
by Catherine Mann
2003
Private Maneuvers brings a pilot's precision and a relationship's unpredictability into the same tight space. Hidden feelings and dangerous work make every move feel loaded.
Strategic Engagement
by Catherine Mann
2003
An engagement, real or strategic, becomes much harder to control once attraction and duty start pulling in different directions. This is Catherine Mann in classic military-romance mode, quick, tense, and emotional.
Under Siege
by Catherine Mann
2003
Pressure closes in fast in this early Wingman Warriors romance, where danger outside only sharpens the tension between the central couple. Surviving the moment means confronting what they really mean to each other.
Joint Forces
by Catherine Mann
2004
When the mission requires people to work in perfect sync, emotions become one more thing to manage. Joint Forces delivers Catherine Mann's usual blend of military momentum and hard-to-ignore chemistry.
Explosive Alliance
by Catherine Mann
2005
Two people under pressure form an alliance that becomes much more dangerous, and much more intimate, than either expected. Military suspense and strong attraction drive the story from the start.
The Captive's Return
by Catherine Mann
2005
A dangerous trek through the jungle forces a husband and wife back together after too much time apart. Along the way, buried truths, a child, and the past all demand to be faced at once.
Awaken to Danger
by Catherine Mann
2006
Danger has a way of waking up everything a couple would rather keep buried. This Wingman Warriors entry pairs military tension with a relationship that gets more complicated every time the stakes rise.
Fully Engaged
by Catherine Mann
2006
A relationship already under pressure is pushed further by military duty and a situation that refuses to stay emotional at a safe distance. Catherine Mann keeps the pace brisk and the feelings close to the surface.
Out of Uniform
by Catherine Mann
2008
When military structure falls away, feelings that were easier to suppress become impossible to ignore. This Wingman Warriors romance blends service, longing, and the hard question of what comes after duty.
Series background & context
Wingman Warriors is one of Catherine Mann's longest-running military romance worlds, following Air Force crews and the people closest to them through dangerous assignments, long separations, and hard-won reunions. These books have a strong sense of camaraderie, which makes them especially satisfying if you like recurring characters and a shared professional world.
Air crews, medics, pilots, and partners all matter here.
The series stretches across rescue missions, deployments, war zones, and home-front fallout. Some books focus on couples reconnecting after old heartbreak. Others hinge on children, captivity, medical crises, or missions that leave very little room for personal drama until the personal becomes impossible to ignore. Mann gives the books movement and scale, but she does not lose sight of the emotional core.
One reason the series works so well is that duty is never abstract. These characters know the cost of service. They understand what it means to live with uncertainty, to protect their team, and to carry on after fear or grief. That reality makes the romances feel sharper. Love is not a pleasant bonus. It is something the characters have to fight to make space for.
At the same time, Wingman Warriors is not relentlessly grim. There is warmth in the friendships, in the returning cast, and in the sense that these people know each other very well. That ongoing community makes even the more dramatic plots feel anchored.
If you enjoy military romance with real teamwork, recurring names, and a balance of action and heart, Wingman Warriors is a great part of Mann's catalog to explore. It shows her long-form strength, building a world where missions matter, but so do loyalty, family, and the promise of coming home.
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.






























Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts