Publication order is the only order that makes real sense for the full experience. The author released them that way for a reason—each new piece builds on the reader's existing knowledge from the previous ones. Jumping around based on chronological events within the story messes with the pacing and the carefully constructed reveals.
Like, 'The Lost Sisters' is technically a side-story concurrent with 'The Cruel Prince', but its impact relies on you having just finished that novel and being furious at Taryn. Reading it first would rob you of that specific emotional reaction. The whole series plays with perspective and unreliable narration, so the order you get information in fundamentally changes the story you're telling yourself. Sticking to the release schedule preserves that intended narrative layering.
Man, trying to figure out the chronology for this one is a whole separate adventure. The core trilogy—'The Cruel Prince', 'The Wicked King', 'The Queen of Nothing'—is pretty straightforward, but where folks get tripped up is the companion duology, 'The Lost Sisters' and 'How the King of Elfhame Learned to Hate Stories'. If you read 'The Lost Sisters', that novella from Taryn's view, right after 'The Cruel Prince', it completely reshapes your understanding of that book's climax. Suddenly, Jude's actions feel way more justified, or at least contextualized, but it also spoils some of the mystery if you read it first. The Cardan novella, 'How the King...', works best after finishing the trilogy. It's mostly backstory and epilogue-style scenes that hit harder when you already know how his and Jude's relationship ends up. Reading it earlier would drain a lot of the tension from his character in the main books.
Honestly, skipping the novellas and just doing the trilogy is a totally valid path—the story stands on its own. But if you're a completionist, publication order is safest. I made the mistake of reading the Cardan book between 'The Wicked King' and 'The Queen of Nothing', thinking it was a prequel, and it totally deflated the 'will they, won't they' angst I was living for. The timeline isn't linear across the books; it's more about emotional reveals than strict plot sequence.
I disagree with strict publication order purists. For a first-time reader, just read the trilogy straight through. The novellas are bonus material for after you're invested. The core story's timeline is tight and propulsive, and adding the companion pieces in the middle disrupts that momentum. They're enjoyable, but they're footnotes, not required chapters. Finish Jude and Cardan's main arc first, then go back for the extra glimpses if you want more.
2026-07-14 20:40:20
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A retelling of several of the most famous fairy tales with a kinky, dirty twist. Each story is about 30,000 words so sit back, grab some holy water and relax! It's time to sink in 10 deliciously dark and twisted fairytales! Highly erotic and brimming with dark desires, don't say I didn't warn ya!
18+ Dark Fairytale Series
Rumpled (Retelling of Rumplestiltskin)
Sinderella (Retelling of Cinderella)
Allissa in Wankerland (Retelling of Alice In Wonderland)
Friends With Sexy Benefits (Retelling of Hansel and Gretel)
Snow White and the Seven Hunks (Retelling of Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs)
Red (Retelling of Little Red Riding Hood)
Tangled (Retelling of Rapunzel)
Bella and the Beast (Beauty and The Beast)
Maid For Pleasure (The Ugly Duckling)
Goldilocks and the 3 Were-bears (Goldilocks)
Seven Classic Faery Tales are given a very adult makeover.
You are entering a world of myth, magic, and Immortals.
Throw in the humans for the added spice of erotica and violence.
Mix together and you have dark adult faery tales ........
Do not read if easily offended!
(This is a dark romance. 18+)
King Sven laughs again, one hand fondling the breast of the woman on top of him. The pain in my chest becomes unbearable, and I wince. His eyes flicker with something dark and satisfied. He knows exactly what he’s doing. “Spending a week in prison hasn't tamed your tongue, I see,” he says, the teasing edge in his voice making my skin crawl. “I want to take my time with you… savor you to the fullest. I know I’ll enjoy breaking you.”
“You’ll have to kill me first.”
“Who says I won’t?”
—
In a world where Fae are hunted and treated less than an animal, Olivia and her mute twin brother, Kyle, have spent nine years hiding their true identity within the Shadow Moon Pack. Pretending to be lowly Omegas, they blend into the pack, constantly fearing discovery. But when a simple mistake exposes Olivia's Fae heritage to the sadistic Alpha King Sven—a ruthless hybrid known for his hatred of magical beings—their lives spiral into chaos, even worse they discover they're something more.
Three forbidden mates. Three supernatural bonds. One twisted fate.
A vampire bred for bloodshed. A dragon prince who defies his crown. A demon with nothing left to lose.
For Marcus DeLuca, a mate has always been an impossibility. But fate gives him one anyway. A werewolf. His mortal enemy. And she’s already promised to her alpha. Will he betray his father and Elders to keep Danielle alive?
Aidan is supposed to be untouchable. But one reckless decision—one taste of Sarah—and he shatters every rule that keeps their worlds apart. Now he’s losing control, becoming the greatest danger to Sarah’s life. Can he still protect his reluctant mate?
Zane is used to being wanted. Desired. Feared. As an incubus, pleasure is his weapon—and his curse. But Elena is different. Smart. Ruthless. Untouchable. Not interested in him in the slightest. Can he survive the one woman who sees the monster inside him?
Their bonds are brutal. Addictive. Dangerous.
And the only thing more deadly than loving each other is what happens if they don't.
One seemed so perfect, a strong, handsome warrior wolf.
The other is headstrong with a bad reputation, oh and a Fae.
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A common goal.
A crossed fate.
A deep and undeniable connection.
A which with deep scars in her soul and heart, who run away from her ghosts and isolated herself from civilization so no one could harm her.
A fae male with stronger principles who never consider himself when it comes to dangerous situations and helps the ones he loves the most.
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(Cover by Tiana Lambent)
I've always been drawn to the eerie allure of dark fae stories, especially when they expand into spin-offs or sequels. One that stands out is 'The Cruel Prince' series by Holly Black. The follow-up, 'The Wicked King', delves deeper into Jude's struggle for power in the fae court, with even more political intrigue and dark twists. Another favorite is 'An Enchantment of Ravens' by Margaret Rogerson, which has a companion novel, 'Sorcery of Thorns', that explores a darker side of fae magic intertwined with libraries and grimoires. These books capture the fae's dangerous beauty perfectly, making them impossible to put down.
Yeah, figuring out the order for dark fae series can be a real puzzle. I'd say the author's release order is usually safest, but sometimes chronological works better if the timelines are all tangled. For something like Holly Black's Folk of the Air, you absolutely need to start with 'The Cruel Prince'. Some series have prequel novellas that you could skip at first, but they add so much context later on. I got spoiled for a major twist in one series because I read a later book first, thinking it was a standalone—totally ruined the shock. My advice is to just search the author's website or a dedicated wiki for a definitive list before you dive in; it saves the headache.
Honestly, 'correct' depends on what you want. If you crave a solid narrative journey, follow publication. If you're a world-building nerd who loves connecting dots, maybe chronological, even if the early books feel rougher. I've done both ways with different series and rarely regretted either, as long as I knew what I was getting into.
Just been down that rabbit hole myself! The main series most people mean is the 'Court of the Yearning' trilogy. The first book is 'A Touch of Ember', then 'A Whisper of Shadow', and it wraps up with 'A Crown of Midnight Sun'. Super important to read them in that order because the political alliances shift so much.
There's also a companion novel, 'A Throne of Brambles', which follows a different character during the events of the second book. It's not strictly necessary for the main plot, but it adds some brutal context to a few betrayals. Honestly, the author's website lists 'Throne' as optional, but I read it after finishing the trilogy and wish I'd slotted it in as intended. The timeline gets messy otherwise.
Navigating the Dark Fae universe order got me so frustrated last month. I'd finished 'Court of Blood and Bindings' and couldn't figure out if I should jump to 'Crown of Ash and Shadow' next or if there was some novella in between. The author's website has a master list, but it's buried under the 'extras' tab and hasn't been updated since the last spin-off trilogy launched.
I ended up just asking in the dedicated Facebook fan group. Someone there had a Google Doc link with color-coded reading paths—chronological, publication order, and by character faction. It saved me from accidentally spoiling a major twist in 'Throne of Midnight Petals' by reading a later book first. That group is honestly the most reliable source because the fans track every new release and patreon short story.
Reddit's romancebooks subreddit sometimes has threads about it too, but the info can be a bit scattered across different posts.