As an Amazon Associate, we may earn from qualifying purchases Affiliate disclosure
Agatha Raisin Books in Order
Below is the complete list of Agatha Raisin books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series by M. C. Beaton.
Agatha Raisin Series
- The Quiche of Death (1992)
Buy on Amazon - The Vicious Vet (1993)
Buy on Amazon - The Potted Gardener (1994)
Buy on Amazon - The Walkers of Dembley (1995)
Buy on Amazon - The Murderous Marriage (1996)
Buy on Amazon - The Terrible Tourist (1997)
Buy on Amazon - The Wellspring of Death (1998)
Buy on Amazon - The Wizard of Evesham (1999)
Buy on Amazon - The Witch of Wyckhadden (1999)
Buy on Amazon - The Fairies of Fryfam (2000)
Buy on Amazon - The Love from Hell (2001)
Buy on Amazon - The Day the Floods Came (2002)
Buy on Amazon - The Case of the Curious Curate (2003)
Buy on Amazon - The Haunted House (2003)
Buy on Amazon - The Deadly Dance (2004)
Buy on Amazon - The Perfect Paragon (2005)
Buy on Amazon - Love, Lies and Liquor (2006)
Buy on Amazon - Kissing Christmas Goodbye (2007)
Buy on Amazon - A Spoonful of Poison (2008)
Buy on Amazon - There Goes the Bride (2009)
Buy on Amazon - Busy Body (2010)
Buy on Amazon - As The Pig Turns (2011)
Buy on Amazon - Hiss and Hers (2012)
Buy on Amazon - Christmas Crumble (2012)
Buy on Amazon - Something Borrowed, Someone Dead (2013)
Buy on Amazon - Hell’s Bells (2013)
Buy on Amazon - The Blood of an Englishman (2014)
Buy on Amazon - Agatha’s First Case (2015)
Buy on Amazon - Dishing the Dirt (2015)
Buy on Amazon - Pushing up Daisies (2016)
Buy on Amazon - The Witches’ Tree (2017)
Buy on Amazon - The Dead Ringer (2018)
Buy on Amazon - Beating about the Bush (2019)
Buy on Amazon - Hot to Trot (2020)
Buy on Amazon - Down the Hatch (2021)
Buy on Amazon - Devil’s Delight (2022)
Buy on Amazon - Dead on Target (2023)
Buy on Amazon - Killing Time (2024)
Buy on Amazon - Sugar and Spite (2025)
Buy on Amazon
Agatha Raisin Non-Fiction Series
- The Agatha Raisin Companion (2010)
Buy on Amazon
About Agatha Raisin Series
M.C. Beaton’s Agatha Raisin series is one of the defining achievements of modern cozy crime, but it works because Agatha herself is never as cozy as the label suggests. The official series descriptions present her as a former PR executive who leaves London for the Cotswolds and discovers that village life is far less peaceful than it looks. That premise, first established in The Quiche of Death, gives the books their enduring comic tension: Agatha wants a charming rural reinvention, but what she repeatedly finds instead is murder, gossip, frustration, and a social world that does not immediately soften for her.
What makes the series distinctive is Agatha’s personality. She is not written as a gentle amateur sleuth whose warmth naturally wins over everyone around her. She is prickly, impulsive, image-conscious, often vain, and capable of both sharp social reading and terrible judgment. That edge is exactly why the books last. Beaton built a heroine who could carry comedy without becoming weightless and who could remain recognizable across a very long run of mysteries. The official M.C. Beaton site still describes the series in terms of Agatha’s attempts to settle into Carsely and her talent for getting into trouble, which is a good summary of the balance the books keep: village routine on one side, disruption on the other.
Publication order is the best way to read the series because Agatha’s life does not reset completely from book to book. The mysteries are individually readable, but her relationships, rivalries, professional shifts, and emotional habits develop over time. This matters especially with recurring figures in Carsely and in Agatha’s romantic life, since part of the pleasure of the series is watching how she changes without ever becoming unrecognizably polished. The books reward familiarity. A reader who follows them in sequence gets not only the crimes, but the gradual building of Agatha’s world and the long comic-drama of her trying, and often failing, to become the sort of woman she imagines herself to be.
Another reason order matters is the sheer scale of the series. The official M.C. Beaton site now lists Sugar and Spite as the 36th Agatha Raisin novel, which shows just how substantial the sequence has become. Over time, the books evolved from a clever premise into a fully established mystery world, one large enough to support television adaptation as well. Official author and publisher pages continue to identify Agatha Raisin as one of Beaton’s signature creations and as the basis for the screen series starring Ashley Jensen.
There is also an important publication-history point for later entries. M.C. Beaton died in 2019, but the Agatha Raisin series did not end there. Official series and author pages make clear that R.W. Green has continued both the Agatha Raisin and Hamish Macbeth books. That means the later Agatha titles belong to a continuation phase of the series rather than a closed original run, and readers moving through the order may notice the author credit reflecting that transition. It is not a separate spin-off sequence; it is the same series carried forward after Beaton’s death.
For readers who already have the list above, the best way to understand Agatha Raisin is as a long-running character series first and a puzzle series second. The murders matter, but the real engine is Agatha herself: ambitious, difficult, funny, lonely, resilient, and almost always more exposed than she wants to admit. Read in publication order, the books become more than a chain of village mysteries. They become the long, entertaining record of a woman colliding with small-town life again and again and somehow making that collision her own form of belonging.