Below is the complete list of Catherine Coulter’s Sherbrooke Brides books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Sherbrooke Brides Books
- The Sherbrooke Bride (1992)
View Book - The Hellion Bride (1992)
View Book - The Heiress Bride (1992)
View Book - Mad Jack (1999)
View Book - The Courtship (2000)
View Book - The Scottish Bride (2001)
View Book - Pendragon (2001)
View Book - The Sherbrooke Twins (2004)
View Book - Lyon’s Gate (2005)
View Book - Wizard’s Daughter (2007)
View Book - Prince of Ravenscar (2011)
View Book
About Sherbrooke Brides
Catherine Coulter’s Sherbrooke books are one of those historical romance series that grow outward from a single family until the family itself becomes the real through-line. Official series pages present the Sherbrooke line as beginning with the original Bride trilogy—The Sherbrooke Bride, The Hellion Bride, and The Heiress Bride—before expanding into later novels such as Mad Jack, The Courtship, The Scottish Bride, Pendragon, The Sherbrooke Twins, Lyon’s Gate, Wizard’s Daughter, and The Prince of Ravenscar. That structure is important, because this is not a single-couple arc stretched across many books. It is a family saga that starts in Regency romance and gradually widens into a larger Sherbrooke world.
The family connection is what makes publication order matter. The early trilogy establishes the emotional and social center of the series through the first Sherbrooke marriages, and later books gain much of their appeal by following relations, descendants, and connected households. Penguin’s descriptions reinforce this continuity: The Courtship explicitly brings together characters from earlier Sherbrooke novels, The Scottish Bride shifts focus to Tysen Sherbrooke, and The Sherbrooke Twins continues the family saga through James and Jason Sherbrooke. Read in order, the books preserve the pleasure of watching the family widen rather than simply reappear by name.
What gives the series its identity is that it never feels like a generic Regency line with a borrowed surname pasted across unrelated books. The Sherbrookes are the point. Coulter uses the family to create continuity of tone and atmosphere: aristocratic households, marriage plots, inherited responsibilities, and the recurring tension between convention and unruly personality. The first books are more squarely historical romance, but the later line becomes broader and sometimes stranger in flavor. Official descriptions of later entries such as Wizard’s Daughter specifically note a paranormal twist, which shows that the Sherbrooke world eventually stretches beyond straightforward Regency courtship into a more Gothic and family-legend register.
That widening is one of the main reasons the series is rewarding in sequence. The Sherbrooke books are not just about who marries whom. They are about the accumulation of family history. Younger figures introduced in one novel matter more later. Houses, titles, and long-running attachments gain weight. Even the side branches matter because they make the Sherbrookes feel like a living lineage rather than a convenient romance-series label. Coulter’s own site underscores that sense of expansion by separating out Grayson Sherbrooke novellas as a later supernatural offshoot tied to Ryder Sherbrooke’s line, showing how far the family world eventually extends beyond the original Bride books.
Taken as a whole, the Sherbrooke Brides series is best understood as a historical romance family saga that begins with a tightly connected trilogy and then grows into a much broader Sherbrooke chronicle. The order is straightforward on paper, but the real reward of reading in publication order is seeing the family deepen book by book, from early Regency marriage stories into a wider, more layered world of heirs, relations, and later-generation complications.