Below is the complete list of Kim Vogel Sawyer books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Bringing Maggie Home Series
- Bringing Maggie Home (2017)
- Unveiling the Past (2020)
Heart of the Prairie Series
- Waiting for Summer’s Return (2006)
- Where Willows Grow (2007)
- Where the Heart Leads (2008)
- A Promise for Spring (2009)
- Fields of Grace (2009)
- A Hopeful Heart (2009)
- Courting Miss Amsel (2011)
- A Whisper of Peace (2011)
- Song of My Heart (2012)
- A Home in Drayton Valley (2012)
Jimmy of Cottonwood Valley Series
with Ralph Vogel
- Jimmy & the Whale (2016)
- Jimmy & the Whale Hunt (2016)
- Jimmy and the Jinx (2017)
Kansas Weddings Series
- Dear John (2006)
- That Wilder Boy (2006)
- Promising Angela (2006)
Katy Lambright Series
- Katy’s New World (2010)
- Katy’s Debate (2010)
- Katy’s Homecoming (2010)
- Katy’s Decision (2011)
The Librarian of Boone’s Hollow Series
- The Librarian of Boone’s Hollow (2020)
- Return to Boone’s Hollow (2022)
Mountain Lakes Series
- A Seeking Heart (2002)
- A Heart Surrenders (2004)
- When A Heart Cries (2004)
My Heart Remembers Series
- My Heart Remembers (2008)
- In Every Heartbeat (2010)
Sommerfield Trilogy Series
- Bygones (2007)
- Beginnings (2007)
- Blessings (2008)
Sweet Sanctuary Series
- Sweet Sanctuary (2013)
- My Soul Sings (2016)
- Sinking Sand (2017)
What Once Was Lost Series
- The Grace That Leads Us Home (2013)
- What Once Was Lost (2013)
- Just As I Am (2013)
The Zimmerman Restoration Trilogy Series
- When Mercy Rains (2014)
- When Grace Sings (2015)
- When Love Returns (2015)
Standalone Novels Series
- When Hope Blossoms (2012)
- Echoes of Mercy (2013)
- Through the Deep Waters (2014)
- Room for Hope (2016)
- Guide Me Home (2016)
- Grace and the Preacher (2017)
- Beneath a Prairie Moon (2018)
- Ours for a Season (2018)
- A Silken Thread (2019)
- From This Moment (2021)
- Freedom’s Song (2021)
- Still My Forever (2022)
- The Tapestry of Grace (2023)
- The Songbird of Hope Hill (2024)
- Hope’s Enduring Echo (2025)
Short Stories/Novellas Series
- Something Borrowed (2017)
- To Sing Another Day (2017)
- Bare Feet and Warm Sand (2023)
Non-Fiction Series
- In the Morning When I Rise (2019)
Secrets of Wayfarers Inn Series
- The Innkeepers’ Conundrum (2018)
Love & Romance Collections Series
- The Rails to Love Romance Collection (2016)
About Kim Vogel Sawyer
Kim Vogel Sawyer writes inspirational fiction in a mode that is easy to recognize once you have spent time with her bibliography. Her novels are built around faith, family, hardship, and the possibility of emotional restoration, but they are not all cut from one pattern. On her official site, she groups her books into historical stories, contemporary stories, Mennonite-themed stories, young adult stories, and devotional collections, which is a useful way to understand the breadth of her work. She is not only a writer of one recurring series or one narrow setting. She has built a larger body of Christian fiction that moves across time periods and communities while keeping the same underlying commitment to hope.
Her own biography also makes clear how personally rooted that writing life is. Sawyer says her first novel, A Seeking Heart, was loosely based on her mother’s family history and was published in 2002. That detail matters because it helps explain the emotional texture of her books. Even when the stories are strongly shaped by genre expectations, they often carry the feeling of lived memory, inherited values, and family experience rather than purely invented drama. Her official site frames her work as “gentle stories of hope,” and that phrase is more revealing than it may first sound. The gentleness is not softness in the sense of having no conflict; it is a steady moral and emotional approach to suffering.
The clearest way to understand her bibliography is through its major streams rather than through one dominant franchise. Historical fiction is a large and important part of her shelf, and publisher pages for recent novels such as Hope’s Enduring Echo and Where We Belong show that this remains one of her strongest lanes. These books tend to combine romance, hardship, faith, and community life in ways that make the historical setting feel central rather than decorative. Sawyer’s fiction often places characters inside circumstances shaped by loss, labor, migration, family fracture, or moral testing, then allows hope to emerge gradually rather than cheaply.
At the same time, she has also written contemporary fiction, which shows that her work is not limited to one historical register. A recent example like From This Moment demonstrates the way she carries the same concerns into the present day: wounded people, spiritual doubt, emotional healing, and relationships built through acts of care and grace. That consistency across historical and contemporary settings is one reason her bibliography feels cohesive. She is not reinventing herself from genre to genre. She is revisiting the same moral and emotional concerns in different narrative forms.
Sawyer’s books also make sense when grouped by smaller series and thematic lines. Penguin Random House currently highlights The Zimmerman Restoration Trilogy as one of her named series, and reviews and book pages on her site refer to other grouped lines such as the Tennessee Dreams and River of Hope books. That pattern suggests a writer who likes connected emotional worlds, even if she is not primarily known for one giant, endlessly expanding universe. Readers often come to her through one book, but they stay because the rest of the shelf offers related emotional territory: faith under strain, damaged families, resilient women, and men and women learning to trust both God and one another again.
Her career has also been marked by both commercial success and genre recognition. Penguin Random House describes her as an award-winning, bestselling author with more than 1.5 million books in print in seven languages, and notes honors including the ACFW Carol Award and the Inspirational Readers’ Choice Award. Those details fit the kind of career her bibliography suggests: not a passing success built on one breakout title, but a durable and respected place within inspirational fiction. She continues to publish new work, with publisher pages currently listing recent titles such as Still My Forever, The Songbird of Hope Hill, Hope’s Enduring Echo, and Where We Belong.
The best way to understand Kim Vogel Sawyer’s bibliography, then, is as the work of a writer who has built a substantial Christian-fiction career through steadiness rather than spectacle. She writes stories of restoration, but she does not pretend restoration is simple. Her novels return again and again to loneliness, broken trust, social pressure, historical hardship, and the long work of grace. That is what gives her shelf its identity. Whether the setting is historical Kansas, a Mennonite community, or a contemporary church, the emotional promise remains the same: ordinary lives tested by sorrow, and hope made believable because it has first been made difficult.