Below is the complete list of Samantha Christy’s Montana Brothers books in order. For this series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.
Publication Order of Montana Brothers Books
About Montana Brothers
Samantha Christy’s Montana Brothers series is part of her wider Calloway Creek romance world, a connected contemporary romance setting built around family ties, recurring characters, small-town proximity, and emotionally charged relationships. The books focus on the Montana circle within Calloway Creek, continuing Christy’s habit of giving each couple its own central love story while allowing the surrounding family and community to create a larger sense of continuity.
The series fits naturally beside the Calloway Brothers and McQuaid Brothers books, but it has its own emotional texture. The Montana stories lean strongly into protective heroes, complicated family situations, grief, single parenthood, unexpected responsibility, and the kind of love that arrives at the least convenient moment. Christy’s romances are not usually light, low-stakes courtships. Her characters tend to come into the relationship carrying pain, fear, guilt, or unfinished damage, and the romantic arc is as much about learning to trust again as it is about attraction.
Quiet Beautiful Things opens the Montana Brothers books with Blake Montana and Ellie Stone. Its premise gives the series an immediate family-centered shape: Blake is adjusting to life as a single father after discovering he has a young daughter, while Ellie enters his world through her work with the child’s communication needs. The romance develops around care, protection, uncertainty, and the pressure of becoming the person someone else needs before feeling fully ready. That balance between emotional vulnerability and fierce protectiveness becomes one of the series’ core notes.
Loud Unspoken Memories shifts into a more grief-driven story through Dallas Montana and Martina Carver. Dallas’s isolation after devastating loss gives the book a heavier emotional atmosphere, while the snowed-in, forced-proximity setup brings two damaged people into close contact before either is prepared for what it might mean. Christy uses the romance to explore the difference between surviving pain and allowing life to begin again, a theme that runs through much of her broader bibliography.
With Crazy Imperfect Hearts, the tone changes without leaving the Montana family’s emotional orbit. Lucas Montana and Regan bring an opposites-attract energy, mixing control, eccentricity, family business pressure, and unexpected consequences. The book has a more playful surface than the grief-centered Dallas story, but it still works within Christy’s usual territory: people who look confident from the outside while privately struggling with fear, identity, or the possibility of being truly chosen.
Tiny Precious Secrets centers on Allie and Asher, adding age-gap tension, single-parent elements, commitment fears, and a surprise pregnancy thread. Its placement gives the series a more rounded family feel, moving beyond the brothers alone and showing how the Calloway Creek world keeps expanding through relationships, children, and difficult choices. Asher’s desire for something lasting and Allie’s instinct to protect herself create a romance built around walls coming down slowly rather than a simple rush into happiness.
The Montana Brothers series is best understood as a character-linked branch of Samantha Christy’s contemporary romance universe. Each book can stand on its own as a separate couple’s story, but the emotional payoff is stronger when read within the Calloway Creek framework because familiar names, family bonds, and shared community history add depth. Christy’s strength here is not just in matching couples, but in making every romance feel tied to a larger network of people whose lives keep overlapping long after one book ends.




