Suzanne Enoch Books in Order: The Complete Reading Guide
Suzanne Enoch is the rare romance author with dual citizenship: half her heart lives in Mayfair ballrooms, the other half somewhere in the misty Highlands. If you've ever wanted a Regency romance where the hero shows up to Almack's in a kilt and absolutely does not apologise for it, she is your author. Here are her key series in reading order — and a note on which world each one belongs to.
The thing to know going in: Enoch's Highland books are not a separate universe from her Regency books. Her signature move is the collision — Scottish heroes dragged to London for the Season, English ladies packed off to drafty castles, and clan politics crashing into ton gossip. Every book is a standalone romance, but within each series the siblings and clans build on each other, so keep the internal order. Here it is, series by series.
The Lessons in Love trilogy in order (classic Regency)
Enoch's beloved London-set trilogy, and the best starting point if you want pure Regency — scoundrels, wagers, and heroines who set out to reform rakes with mixed results.
- The Rake — three young ladies decide to teach London's worst rakes a lesson. Lesson one goes spectacularly sideways.
- London's Perfect Scoundrel — the fan favourite, widely considered one of the great Regency romances of its era.
- England's Perfect Hero — the quietest of the three ladies and a war-scarred hero. Tender and unexpectedly deep.
The Scandalous Highlanders series in order
The MacLawry clan saga: four siblings, one formidable family, and a decades-old feud that keeps throwing couples together.
- One Hot Scot (2013) — a prequel short story, optional but fun.
- The Devil Wears Kilts (2013) — the eldest MacLawry follows his runaway sister to London and meets her very English best friend.
- Rogue with a Brogue (2014) — a Romeo-and-Juliet romance across the clan feud.
- Mad, Bad, and Dangerous in Plaid (2015)
- Some Like It Scot (2015) — the youngest brother, a kilted lass found living wild, and a fitting finale.
The No Ordinary Hero series in order
Standalone-friendly Highland romances with bigger stakes and battle-hardened heroes.
- Hero in the Highlands (2016) — a career soldier inherits a Scottish dukedom nobody warned him about.
- My One True Highlander (2017) — a kidnapping gone wrong turns into forced proximity done very right.
- A Devil in Scotland (2018) — a revenge-driven return to Inverness and a widow with secrets.
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The Wild Wicked Highlanders series in order
Enoch's funniest series and the modern fan favourite. Three half-wild Scottish brothers learn their English mother will disinherit them unless each marries a proper English bride — and they descend on London like a storm front in plaid.
- It's Getting Scot in Here (2019) — brother number one, a matchmaking mother, and a fiancée swap nobody planned.
- Scot Under the Covers (2020) — a scheming gambler, a sister to protect, and a fake-courtship ploy with real consequences.
- Hit Me With Your Best Scot (2021) — the biggest, wildest brother meets his match.
- Great Scot! (2021) — a follow-up novella for readers not ready to leave the MacTaggerts.
If you finish those and want more of her lighter side, Enoch's standalone Every Duke Has His Day (2023) is a Regency screwball romp involving a chemistry-mad duke, a diamond of the ton, and two stolen poodles.
Where to start with Suzanne Enoch
Choose by mood. Want banter-forward, laugh-out-loud Highland romance? Start with It's Getting Scot in Here — the Wild Wicked Highlanders trilogy is short, complete, and pure joy. Want classic Regency London with rakes and reforming? Start with The Rake and read the Lessons in Love trilogy in order. Want the big family saga? Begin with The Devil Wears Kilts and settle in with the MacLawrys for four books. The three Highland series stand alone from one another, so there is no wrong door — just different weather.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to read Suzanne Enoch's books in order?
Within each series, yes — siblings and clans reappear, and family arcs build book to book. Between series, no. Scandalous Highlanders, No Ordinary Hero, and Wild Wicked Highlanders are all independent entry points, as is the Regency-set Lessons in Love trilogy.
Are Suzanne Enoch's books Regency or Highland romance?
Both, often at the same time. Enoch made her name with London-set Regency romance, then pivoted to Highland-flavoured series that drop Scottish heroes into English drawing rooms — kilts and ballrooms in one story.
Which Suzanne Enoch series should I start with?
For her funniest, most binge-friendly work, start with It's Getting Scot in Here. For classic Regency, start with The Rake. For a bigger Highland saga, begin with The Devil Wears Kilts.