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10 Books Like The Spymaster's Lady

Joanna Bourne's The Spymaster's Lady is the connoisseur's spy romance: a legendary French agent, the British spymaster hunting her, and a cat-and-mouse chase across Napoleonic France where every glance is a gambit. If you crave more clever agents, real danger, and trust as the ultimate battleground, here are ten reads to devour.

The Bourne magic is competence and danger. Annique is never a damsel; she's brilliant, resourceful, and Grey's equal at every turn, which makes their reluctant attraction crackle. The picks below chase that exact formula — espionage, high stakes, secret identities, and two capable people who can't decide whether to trust or outwit each other.

If you want more of Bourne's world

More Spymasters

1. The Black Hawk — Joanna Bourne

Many readers' favorite in the series: a decades-spanning enemies-to-lovers between two master spies who've circled each other for years. If Annique and Grey wrecked you, Justine and Adrian will finish the job. Bourne's prose is a genre treasure.

Series prequel

2. The Forbidden Rose — Joanna Bourne

An aristocrat in hiding and a British spy during the French Revolution's Terror. More of Bourne's signature danger, wit, and lush period detail — essential reading for anyone who loved The Spymaster's Lady.

Agent adventure

3. My Beautiful Enemy — Sherry Thomas

A gentleman-spy and a deadly martial artist of mixed heritage, sweeping from Chinese Turkestan to London drawing rooms. Thomas matches Bourne's intelligence and danger with lush, unusual settings — a spy romance unlike anything else in the genre.

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If it was the secret identity and the danger

Underworld operative

4. Seducing the Duke Before Dawn — Margot St. James

Cressida Belmont returns to England not as the girl who fled in scandal, but as a lethal instrument of the underworld, sent to steal a royal cipher — until a storm traps her with the duke she was once forced to betray. A deadly female operative on a covert mission, tangled with a dangerous man from her past: the espionage-and-secret-identity tension Bourne fans crave. Part of the ten-book Margot St. James collection. See the full bundle →

Wartime intrigue

5. The Duke of Shadows — Meredith Duran

Espionage, colonial upheaval, and a wounded hero with secrets, set against the 1857 Indian uprising. Duran writes danger with literary weight, and the high-stakes, trust-no-one atmosphere echoes Bourne's Napoleonic tension.

Codebreaker heroine

6. The Rose Code — Kate Quinn

Three women decoding secrets at Bletchley Park in WWII, with betrayal and danger threaded through. A different era, but the same thrill: brilliant women in the thick of espionage, where a single mistake is catastrophic.

If you loved the enemies-and-agents tension

Spy meets spy

7. An Extraordinary Union — Alyssa Cole

A Black Union spy working undercover in the Confederacy and a Scottish-born detective on the same secret side. Genuinely tense, deeply romantic, and led by a heroine every bit as clever and courageous as Annique.

Dangerous bargain

8. Unlacing the Duke of Dark Desires — Margot St. James

A duke sheds his title to hunt traitors inside a den of aristocratic depravity, only to fall for Isolde, the disgraced genius at the heart of the society's lethal games. Undercover work, shifting loyalties, and two dangerous people forced to decide whether to trust each other: pure spy-thriller tension in a Regency key. Also part of the ten-book bundle above.

If you want the swashbuckling side of espionage

Pimpernel energy

9. The Scarlet Pimpernel — Baroness Orczy

The original secret-identity spy romance: a foppish aristocrat leading daring rescues under the noses of Revolutionary France, and the wife who doesn't know his true self. A foundational classic that still delivers the disguise-and-danger thrill.

Regency spies

10. The Secret History of the Pink Carnation — Lauren Willig

A dual-timeline romp through a network of Napoleonic-era English spies, full of aliases, flowers-as-codenames, and flirtatious danger. Lighter than Bourne but built on the same delicious espionage machinery — and the start of a long, addictive series.

How to pick your next read

If you want more of Bourne's world, read straight through the Spymasters series — The Black Hawk next. If it was the secret identity and danger, the underworld operatives of the Margot St. James bundle and Meredith Duran deliver. If you loved the enemies-and-agents tension, Alyssa Cole and Sherry Thomas are must-reads. And if you want a whole pile of high-stakes, secret-identity Regency romance without choosing one book at a time, the ten-book collection is the fastest — and cheapest — way to refill the shelf.

Frequently asked questions

What should I read after The Spymaster's Lady?

Reach for espionage historical romance with clever agents and real danger: the rest of Joanna Bourne's Spymasters series, Meredith Duran's The Duke of Shadows, and Sherry Thomas's spy-flavored historicals. For a big batch of high-stakes Regency romance, a curated 10-book bundle keeps the tension going.

Do I need to read Joanna Bourne's Spymasters in order?

The Spymaster's Lady works perfectly as a standalone, though it is part of Bourne's interconnected Spymasters series. Many readers start here with Annique and Grey, then read The Forbidden Rose and The Black Hawk for more of the same world.

What makes a good spy romance?

The best spy romances pair two capable, clever people on opposite or uncertain sides, so trust becomes the real battleground. The Spymaster's Lady is beloved because Annique is never a damsel, the danger never lets up, and the cat-and-mouse tension fuels the romance.