Below is the complete list of Rhys Bowen’s Her Royal Spyness books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Her Royal Spyness Series
- Her Royal Spyness (2007)
Book details - A Royal Pain (2008)
Book details - Royal Flush (2009)
Book details - Royal Blood (2010)
Book details - Naughty in Nice (2011)
Book details - Masked Ball at Broxley Manor (2012)
Book details - The Twelve Clues of Christmas (2012)
Book details - Heirs and Graces (2013)
Book details - Queen of Hearts (2014)
Book details - Malice at the Palace (2015)
Book details - Crowned and Dangerous (2016)
Book details - On Her Majesty’s Frightfully Secret Service (2017)
Book details - Four Funerals and Maybe a Wedding (2018)
Book details - Love and Death Among the Cheetahs (2019)
Book details - The Last Mrs. Summers (2020)
Book details - God Rest Ye, Royal Gentlemen (2021)
Book details - Peril in Paris (2022)
Book details - The Proof of the Pudding (2023)
Book details - We Three Queens (2024)
Book details - From Cradle to Grave (2025)
Book details
About Her Royal Spyness Series
Rhys Bowen’s Her Royal Spyness books are built on a wonderfully unstable premise: a penniless minor royal trying to survive 1930s England while repeatedly stumbling into murder, scandal, and discreet service to the Crown. Official series pages frame Lady Georgiana Rannoch as a member of the British royal family and an amateur sleuth, and that pairing is exactly what gives the books their appeal. Georgie belongs to the world of titles, protocol, and great houses, but she is also chronically short of money, practical when she has to be, and far more resourceful than anyone around her expects. That tension between rank and reality is the series’ engine.
What makes the series work is that it never treats its historical setting as mere costume. The 1930s matter. Georgie moves through a Britain shaped by class, shrinking fortunes, royal scrutiny, and the uneasy atmosphere between the wars, and Bowen uses all of that to give the mysteries texture. These are cozy historical mysteries in tone, but they are not weightless. The comedy, charm, and social absurdity sit alongside real pressure: Georgie’s uncertain position, her family obligations, the demands of etiquette, and the danger of being visible in the wrong place at the wrong moment.
Publication order matters here because the series depends so much on Georgie’s personal development and the gradual deepening of her world. This is not a static character dropped into interchangeable period capers. Her relationships, confidence, and role within both the royal circle and the mystery plots accumulate over time. The official series list now runs from Her Royal Spyness through later entries including From Cradle to Grave, with To Crown It All also announced as a new Royal Spyness mystery. Read in order, the books preserve the full pleasure of watching Georgie grow from an underfunded young aristocrat in over her head into a much more assured heroine without losing the light touch that made the early novels so inviting.
Another strength of the series is its balance of recurring figures and changing settings. Georgie’s family, friends, romantic life, and royal connections give the books continuity, but Bowen is also happy to move her into country houses, London society, foreign travel, and palace-adjacent situations that keep the line from becoming too closed in. That flexibility helps explain the series’ longevity. It can remain recognizably itself while changing the exact social pressure around Georgie from book to book. The mysteries matter, but the larger pleasure lies in the atmosphere: wit, class comedy, period detail, and the constant question of how someone with impeccable lineage and very little money is supposed to behave when a body turns up nearby.
Within Rhys Bowen’s bibliography, Her Royal Spyness is one of her signature achievements. Her official bio and publisher pages identify it alongside the Molly Murphy books as one of her major historical mystery series, and that feels right. If Molly Murphy gives Bowen an immigrant New York setting and a more grounded early-twentieth-century texture, Georgie gives her access to British class comedy, royal entanglement, and a heroine whose charm depends on being both insider and outsider at once.
Taken as a whole, the Her Royal Spyness series is best understood as a long-running historical mystery line in which character and setting are inseparable. Georgie is the reason the books sparkle, but the series lasts because Bowen built a world around her that can sustain humor, romance, danger, and social observation all at once. Read in publication order, the novels offer more than a sequence of clever mysteries; they create the pleasure of returning to one of historical cozy crime’s most distinctive heroines.