Below is the complete list of Cathy Maxwell books in order. For each series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.
Publication Order of The Brides of Wishmore Books
Publication Order of Cameron Sisters Books
Publication Order of The Chattan Curse Books
Publication Order of The Gambler’s Daughters Books
Publication Order of A Logical Man’s Guide to Dangerous Women Books
Publication Order of Marriage Books
Publication Order of Marrying the Duke Books
Publication Order of Scandals and Seductions Books
Publication Order of Spinster Heiresses Books
Publication Order of Standalone Books
Publication Order of Short Stories/Novellas Books
- In a Moonlit Garden (2012)
Published in 2012, In a Moonlit Garden is listed as book #2 in the Short Stories/Novellas series.
Publication Order of Busty Bodice Club Books
About Cathy Maxwell
Cathy Maxwell is an American historical romance novelist known for witty, emotionally generous love stories set largely in Regency and Scottish historical worlds. Her books combine courtship, family pressure, social reputation, desire, and humor, with heroines and heroes who often have to push against expectation before they can claim a life of their own. Across a career spanning more than forty historical romances, Maxwell has become a familiar name to readers who enjoy traditional romance structure delivered with warmth, pace, and a strong sense of character.
Before turning to fiction, Maxwell had an unusually varied background. She worked as a news broadcaster, served in the U.S. Navy, and spent time in Naval intelligence, including a tour connected with the Pentagon. That pre-writing life gives her biography a distinctive shape, though her novels are not military fiction. What carries into the books is less the subject matter than a practical, energetic sense of people under pressure. Her characters are often caught between duty and longing, public role and private need, family loyalty and personal happiness.
Maxwell’s romance career is rooted in historical settings, especially the Regency-era marriage market, aristocratic society, and Scottish clan or Highland-inflected storylines. She writes within recognizable historical-romance conventions, but her appeal lies in how comfortably she handles them. Forced marriages, scandal, inheritance, reputation, reluctant attraction, old obligations, and second chances appear frequently, yet her tone is rarely bleak. Even when the books involve grief, betrayal, poverty, or social disgrace, the storytelling tends to keep a lively human warmth at its center.
Several connected series define the shape of Maxwell’s bibliography. The Marriage books, including Married in Haste and A Scandalous Marriage, show her interest in marriage as both a romantic resolution and a complicated starting point. The Cameron Sisters series, beginning with Temptation of a Proper Governess, leans into family connection, Scottish elements, and heroines negotiating difficult emotional and social terrain. Scandals and Seductions, with books such as A Seduction at Christmas and The Earl Claims His Wife, reflects one of Maxwell’s most consistent strengths: using scandal not merely as a plot device, but as a way to test character, loyalty, and reputation.
Her Chattan Curse trilogy brings a stronger thread of legend and inherited doom into the romance, while The Brides of Wishmore and Marrying the Duke continue her interest in family-centered historical romance with clear series identities. Later works such as the Spinster Heiress books, A Logical Man’s Guide to Dangerous Women, and The Gambler’s Daughters show Maxwell continuing to work within the genre she knows best while refreshing the premise through unconventional heroines, difficult fortunes, and men who are less in control than they first appear.
Maxwell’s style is polished, approachable, and character-forward. She is not a dense historical novelist in the sense of stopping the story for heavy period explanation; the historical frame supports the romance rather than overwhelming it. Her books are built for readers who want emotional momentum, banter, longing, and satisfying resolution, with enough social detail to make reputation, money, rank, and family expectation matter.
Her bibliography is best understood as a broad body of historical romance organized through clusters of related families, marriages, scandals, and legacies. Cathy Maxwell’s lasting place in the genre comes from consistency: she writes romance with confidence in its pleasures, respect for its emotional stakes, and a clear belief that love stories can be playful, dramatic, and deeply comforting at the same time.













































