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12 Books Like Georgette Heyer to Read Next

Nobody does it quite like Heyer. The slang, the curricle races, the aunts, the heroes undone by a well-timed set-down — she invented the Regency romance as we know it, and then wrote fifty-odd books nobody has fully matched since. But if you have read The Grand Sophy so many times the spine has given up, here are twelve books and authors that carry her torch.

What makes a book feel like Heyer? Wit before heat, always. A comedy-of-manners engine where the obstacles are social — meddling relatives, mistaken identities, imprudent engagements — rather than melodramatic. And dialogue that does the falling in love for you, so that by the time anyone declares themselves, you have watched two people become hopelessly suited across two hundred pages of bickering. One honest note before we start: Heyer readers often want charm over spice, so we have flagged heat levels throughout.

If you want the wit and the banter

The original

1. Jane Austen — start with Emma

Heyer learned at Austen's knee, and if you somehow came to Heyer first, the source awaits. Emma is the closest to Heyer's comic machinery — a clever, wrong-headed heroine, a hero who has been there all along, and a village full of gloriously silly people. Pride and Prejudice follows, obviously.

Modern heir apparent

2. A Lady's Guide to Fortune-Hunting — Sophie Irwin

The most openly Heyer-esque book of the last decade. Kitty Talbot needs a rich husband to save her sisters and approaches the marriage mart like a military campaign — until a cynical lord catches on to her scheme. Caper energy, sparkling dialogue, kisses-only heat. Irwin has clearly read her Grand Sophy.

Banter with heat

3. The Bridgerton series — Julia Quinn

Quinn is the bridge between Heyer's drawing rooms and the modern shelf. The Bridgerton family has Heyer's warmth and comic timing — sprawling siblings, meddling mamas, Lady Whistledown's cutting columns — with open-door romance Heyer never wrote. Start with The Viscount Who Loved Me for the Pall Mall scene alone.

The sharpest pen

4. Lord of Scoundrels — Loretta Chase

Chase writes the wittiest sentences in historical romance, full stop. Jessica Trent is a heroine Heyer would salute — unflappable, sensible, lethal with a parasol — and the Marquess of Dain never stood a chance. Open-door, but the duel of words is the main event.

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If you want charm over spice

Quiet & masterful

5. A Summer to Remember — Mary Balogh

Balogh at her gentlest: a fake betrothal between a scandal-trailed rake and the most proper lady in London. Balogh writes with Heyer's restraint and precision, then adds an emotional depth all her own. Her backlist is enormous — this is the perfect door in.

Sweet & proper

6. The Parish Orphans of Devon — Mimi Matthews

If what you love in Heyer is the propriety — the sense that a gloved hand brushing a sleeve can carry a whole chapter — Matthews is your author. Victorian-set, closed-door, immaculately researched, and full of honourable heroes and quietly brave heroines.

Cosy & comic

7. The Six Sisters series — Marion Chesney

Before she became M.C. Beaton of Agatha Raisin fame, Chesney wrote dozens of short, frothy, traditional Regencies. The Six Sisters books are quick, funny, clean, and perfect between heavier reads — the closest thing to Heyer's lighter capers still in print.

Joyful & trope-forward

8. The Duchess Deal — Tessa Dare

Dare is the funniest working historical romance writer, and her scarred, grumpy Duke of Ashbury versus seamstress Emma Gladstone is a screwball delight. Fair warning for the strictly-clean crowd: Dare is very much open-door — but the jokes-per-page ratio is Heyer-worthy.

If you want the adventure and the scandal

Rake reformed

9. How to Tame a Shameless Rake — Margot St. James

Cora Aldridge needs a mask society will fear to dismantle the racing syndicate that ruined her family — and finds one in Gareth Lockwood, a disgraced war hero with a wildfire grin. Three rules govern their arrangement: no gambling, no spirits, no intimacy. Heyer readers will recognise the marriage-of-convenience machinery; note this one runs considerably warmer than Heyer ever did.

Storm-locked manor

10. Caught in the Viscount's Bed — Margot St. James

A fugitive apothecary, a poisoned viscount, and a desperate bargain sealed as a blizzard closes over Malden Manor. The masquerade-betrothal plot is pure Regency tradition; the execution is darker and steamier than the traditional shelf. One of ten in the Margot St. James collection. See all ten titles →

The classics worth circling back to

How to pick your next read

If you loved the comedy of manners, go Sophie Irwin or Marion Chesney. If you loved the restraint and the propriety, go Mary Balogh or Mimi Matthews — they are the gentlest landing. If you loved the banter and don't mind the door swinging open, go Julia Quinn, Loretta Chase, or Tessa Dare. And if you want a deep pile of Regency romance for less than the price of one paperback, a curated ten-book bundle keeps the shelf stocked for weeks.

Frequently asked questions

Which modern authors write like Georgette Heyer?

The closest modern matches are Mary Balogh for emotional restraint, Mimi Matthews for gentle, proper romance, Sophie Irwin for Heyer-style caper plots, and Julia Quinn for the sparkling banter. None replicate her exactly, but each carries one strand of her DNA.

Are books like Georgette Heyer's clean?

Heyer's own novels are entirely closed-door, and many readalikes stay gentle: Mimi Matthews, Marion Chesney, and Sophie Irwin are clean or nearly so. Julia Quinn, Loretta Chase, and Tessa Dare bring the same wit with open-door heat, so check heat levels before you buy.

Which Georgette Heyer book should I read first?

Most fans point new readers to The Grand Sophy, Frederica, Venetia, or Cotillion. Cotillion is the sleeper favourite — its hero is the kind, unassuming man rather than the rake, and the final chapters are among the funniest in the genre.