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Miss Julia Books in Order

Below is the complete list of Miss Julia books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series by Ann B. Ross.

Miss Julia Series

  1. Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind (1990)
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  2. Miss Julia Takes Over (2001)
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  3. Miss Julia Throws a Wedding (2002)
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  4. Miss Julia Hits the Road (2003)
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  5. Miss Julia Meets Her Match (2004)
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  6. Miss Julia’s School of Beauty (2005)
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  7. Miss Julia Stands Her Ground (2006)
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  8. Miss Julia Strikes Back (2007)
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  9. Miss Julia Paints the Town (2008)
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  10. Miss Julia Delivers the Goods (2009)
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  11. Miss Julia Renews Her Vows (2010)
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  12. Miss Julia Rocks the Cradle (2011)
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  13. Miss Julia to the Rescue (2012)
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  14. Miss Julia Stirs Up Trouble (2013)
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  15. Miss Julia’s Marvelous Makeover (2014)
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  16. Miss Julia Lays Down the Law (2015)
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  17. Miss Julia Inherits a Mess (2016)
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  18. Miss Julia Weathers the Storm (2017)
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  19. Miss Julia Raises the Roof (2018)
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  20. Miss Julia Takes the Wheel (2019)
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  21. Miss Julia Knows a Thing or Two (2020)
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  22. Miss Julia Happily Ever After (2021)
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Miss Julia Short Stories/Novellas Series

  1. Miss Julia’s Gift (2013)
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About Miss Julia Series

Ann B. Ross’s Miss Julia books are Southern comic mysteries built around one of the most entertaining late-blooming heroines in modern series fiction. Miss Julia starts as a recently widowed, respectable woman in a small North Carolina town, then gradually becomes something much more interesting: a sharp, stubborn, socially formidable amateur sleuth whose orderly life keeps colliding with scandal, crime, family complications, and the sort of local chaos that polite society prefers not to mention out loud. The series begins with Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind in 1999 and then grows into a long-running sequence that keeps the same warm, humorous, distinctly Southern voice while letting Miss Julia’s world deepen over time.

What makes the series work is the title character herself. Miss Julia is not a detective by trade, not a tough investigator, and not someone who sets out looking for danger. She is, however, observant, proud, practical, and increasingly unwilling to let nonsense go unchallenged. Her appeal comes from the contrast between appearance and function. On the surface she is a proper churchgoing widow with strong views on order and propriety. In practice, she becomes the person most capable of navigating lies, family messes, local power plays, and murder when they appear in her orbit.

The early books are especially important because they establish the social world that gives the series its life. Miss Julia Speaks Her Mind begins with a personal scandal that overturns everything she thought she knew about her marriage and her place in town. That first disruption is crucial. It opens the door to the larger series by forcing Miss Julia out of the narrow social role she has been living in and into a more active, complicated version of herself. Later books build on that foundation rather than resetting her. Publication order matters here because the pleasure of the series comes not only from the individual mysteries, but from watching Miss Julia’s confidence, relationships, and authority evolve.

Another major strength is the supporting cast. These books are not one-woman performances. Miss Julia’s friends, household circle, romantic entanglements, and recurring local personalities give the series much of its momentum. Eccentricity is part of the design, but Ross uses it carefully. The people around Miss Julia are funny, frustrating, loyal, meddlesome, and often more perceptive than they first appear. Over time, the town itself becomes one of the series’ great pleasures: a place shaped by manners, gossip, grudges, church culture, status, and private histories that never stay fully private.

Tone is central. The Miss Julia books are mysteries, but they are also social comedies. Ross writes with a light hand and excellent timing, which allows serious matters to sit alongside wit without collapsing into silliness. That balance is harder to manage than it looks. These novels can deal with death, betrayal, aging, money, family strain, and romantic disappointment, yet they still feel buoyant. Miss Julia’s voice is the key to that balance. She keeps the books grounded even when events around her become delightfully absurd.

One reason the series lasts so well is that it never treats its heroine as fixed. Miss Julia ages, adapts, falls in love, gets exasperated, changes her mind, and grows more comfortable taking charge. The later books are rewarding precisely because they rest on all that accumulated history. The list above handles the order itself. What matters underneath that list is that Miss Julia is a progression series as much as a mystery series. The books get richer as the world around Miss Julia becomes more familiar and as she becomes more fully herself.

Read in publication order, the series offers more than a run of charming Southern mysteries. It becomes a long, satisfying portrait of reinvention: a woman expected to remain decorative and predictable discovering that she is cleverer, tougher, and far more dangerous to nonsense than anyone around her first assumed.

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