A followup ranking of HR authors based only on their best book.
I'm back with more hot takes/controversial thoughts! The other day, I made a post ranking a whole bunch of HR authors based on their body of work and my personal preferences in terms of HR.
Because I ranked the authors based on all their books (or all their books that I've read in the cases where I haven't read all their books), that list, of course, had its flaws, and I was hard on certain authors because I didn't let myself rank them highly if their body of work varied in quality, so some authors with really good books got ranked pretty low.
So, I decided to make a second list, ranking all these authors based on what I consider their best book only. In some cases (which I will make clear), I ranked them based on the only book of theirs I've read, so take those rankings with a grain of salt, because that generally applies to authors I don't like. Also, if you think they have a better book than the one I listed, let me know!
Because I'm ranking what I thought were their best books, the ratings are a lot higher this time around! I didn't rate a single book on this list under 2.5 stars, because, even though I don't like some of them, it feels mean to give less than that to a book someone put a lot of heart and effort into, even if I didn't like it.
I've also decided to include both what I rated them last time and their original placement for reference and so that I could reflect on how I ranked them in the last list, and, uh... I have some regrets from last time.
Because it caused some confusion last time, here's a brief, simplified overview of what each rating means to me: 5 stars is great. 4 stars is good. 3 stars is fine. 2.5 stars is halfway because 2.5 is half of 5 (this is where this list ends, because I was nice this time). 2 stars is not for me or not great. 1 star is bad. 0 stars is reserved for AI slop. And I use decimals because nuance is a beautiful thing and not everything fits neatly into boxes.
So, without further ado, a much kinder, more generous ranking of a bunch of HR authors based on what I think is their best book (or, in three cases, books, because I couldn't decide):
5⭐ Candice Proctor: {Night in Eden by Candice Proctor} (overall rating 5 stars, original ranking 1 of 41) Yes, this is my all-time favorite HR book by my all-time favorite HR author.
5⭐ Courtney Milan: {The Duchess Deal by Courtney Milan} (overall rating 5 stars, original ranking 4 of 40). Not actually my favorite Courtney Milan book, but the one I think is probably her best.
5⭐ Mia Vincy: {A Dangerous Kind of Lady by Mia Vincy}, {A Beastly Kind of Earl by Mia Vincy} or {A Wicked Kind of Husband by Mia Vincy} (overall rating 4.5 stars, original ranking 6 out of 40). I couldn't decide which book was better, so I listed all three because they're all great.
5⭐ Sherry Thomas: {Ravishing the Heiress by Sherry Thomas} (overall rating 4.5 stars, original ranking 7 of 40)
5⭐ Ellen O'Connell: {Into the Light by Ellen O'Connell} (overall rating 5 stars, original ranking 2 of 40)
5⭐ Mary Balogh: {The Arrangement by Mary Balogh} and {Only Beloved by Mary Balogh} (overall rating 5 stars, original ranking 3 of 40)
5⭐ Joanna Bourne: {Black Hawk by Joanna Bourne} (overall rating 4.5 stars, original ranking 5 of 40)
4.5⭐ Mimi Matthews: {The Matrimonial Advertisement by Mimi Matthews} (overall rating 4.5 stars, original ranking 8 of 40)
4.5⭐ Stephanie Patterson: {A Terrible Beauty by Stephanie Patterson} (overall rating 3.25 stars, original ranking 17 of 40)
4.5⭐ Lorraine Heath: {Texas Destiny by Lorraine Heath} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 19 of 40)
4.5⭐ Susanna Ives: {Frail by Susanna Ives} (overall rating 4 stars, original ranking 10 of 40)
4.5⭐ Erin Langston: {The Finest Print by Erin Langston} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 23 of 40)
4.5⭐ Lisa Kleypas: {Marrying Winterbourne by Lisa Kleypas} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 20 of 40, exactly halfway!) I had a really hard time picking a "best" book of hers. Her books are all pretty consistent in quality and you always know what you're getting with her. I've never been disappointed by one of her books.
4.25⭐ Eloisa James: {This Duchess of Mine by Eloisa James} (overall rating 4 stars, original ranking 9 of 40). With reflection, I might have put Eloisa James a few spots too high on my original list. Oh, well. I do love this book, though.
4.25⭐ Elisabeth Hobbes: {The Blacksmith's Wife by Elisabeth Hobbes} (overall rating 3.5 stars, original ranking 13 of 40). I'm not sure if I'm being too nice to her or too hard on her. She's one of the authors who introduced me to HR, and I flipping love this book, but it's been a while since I read it and I'm afraid of being too nice since she gives me so much nostalgia.
4.25⭐ Julia Quinn: {The Girl with the Make Believe Husband} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 22 of 40).
4.25⭐ Aydra Richards: {A Duke in Disguise by Aydra Richards} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 18 of 40).
4.25⭐ Joanna Shupe: {Tycoon by Joanna Shupe} (overall rating 4 stars, original ranking 11 of 40).
4.25⭐ Amy Barry: {Kit McBride Gets a Wife by Amy Barry} and {Seven Brides for Beau McBride} (overall rating 3.5 stars, original ranking 12 of 40).
4⭐ Elizabeth Hoyt: {Thief of Shadows by Elizabeth Hoyt} (overall rating 3.5 stars, original ranking 14 of 40)
4⭐ Loretta Chase: {Ten Things I Hate About the Duke by Loretta Chase} (overall rating 3.25 stars, original ranking 16 of 40)
4⭐ Kathleen Ayers: {A Recipe for a Rogue by Kathleen Ayers} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 24 of 40)
4⭐ Julie Anne Long: {After Dark with the Duke by Julie Anne Long} (overall rating 2.75 stars, original ranking 28 of 40). I was definitely hard on her in the last list, so hopefully this can redeem me! Honestly, this is the only book of hers that I've read so far that I actually liked. It's a really good book.
4⭐ Pamela Morsi: {The Love Charm by Pamela Morsi} (overall rating 2.5 stars, original ranking 29 of 40). The only one of Pamela Morsi's books that I actually liked, and one of only two that I didn't DNF. Hopefully, her fans forgive me now that I've given it 4 stars.
3.75⭐ Kerrigan Byrne: {How to Love a Duke in Ten Days by Kerrigan Byrne} (overall rating 3.25 stars, original ranking 15 of 40). I think I was too nice to KB in my first list. I don't dislike her, but I think I messed up ranking her above Stephanie Patterson, Aydra Richards and Lisa Kleypas, so I think putting her about here this time around is more accurate.
3.75⭐ Tessa Dare: {Romancing the Duke by Tessa Dare} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 21 of 40) Even as I'm putting this here, I think I might be being too hard on Tessa Dare. I haven't read any of her books in a while and I think I need to go back and refresh my memory. I've only read Spindle Cove and Castles Ever After, and I do want to read some of her other books now that I'm thinking about it.
3.75⭐ Anne Stuart: {To Love a Dark Lord by Anne Stuart} (overall rating 2.75 stars, original ranking 27 of 40). Not a huge Anne Stuart fan as I find some of her books a bit generic, but this is objectively not a bad book.
3.75⭐ Sarah MacLean: {Daring and the Duke by Sarah MacLean} (overall rating 2.75 stars, original ranking 26 of 40)
3.75⭐ Emily Royal: {Taciturn in the Ton by Emily Royal} (overall rating 2 stars, original ranking 38 of 40). I was definitely too hard on her in hindsight. I should have given her at least 2.5 stars, maybe 3 stars. Her books are fine if a bit cookie-cutter-y. Idk why I had such a grudge against her on the last list!
3.75⭐ Minerva Spencer: {Hyacinth by Minerva Spencer} (overall rating 3 stars, original ranking 25 of 40). To be fair, this is one of only two books of hers that I've read, and I gave the other one about the same rating, so at least she's consistent, and also, I should probably read more of her books.
3.5⭐ Cecilia Grant: {A Lady Awakened by Cecilia Grant} (overall rating 2 stars, original ranking 35 of 40). The only one of her books I didn't DNF, and even then, I'm not wild about it, but objectively it's a decent book. Cecilia Grant just isn't my vibe.
3.5⭐ Stacy Reid: (The Wolf and the Wallflower by Stacy Reid} (overall rating 2.5 stars, original ranking 31 of 40). The most absurd and bonkers book by our queen of bonkers HR!
3.5⭐ Grace Burrowes: {The Duke's Disaster by Grace Burrowes} (overall rating 2.5 stars, original ranking 32 of 40). Another author I may have been too hard on last time, with hindsight. Her books are fine and the quality is relatively consistent, if not particularly memorable.
3⭐ Alice Coldbreath: {A Substitute Wife for the Prizefighter by Alice Coldbreath}. (overall rating 2 stars, original ranking 33 of 40). The only one of her books I haven't hated. Solid 3 stars. The rest of her books are hard passes for me.
2.75⭐ Alexandra Vasti: {In Which Winnie Halifax is Completely Ruined} (overall rating 2 stars, original ranking 34 of 40). I wanted to like Alexandra Vasti so bad. I slogged through all three Halifax Hellion books, and this is the one I disliked the least. Will I give her another try? I don't know. Maybe someday, but I generally gravitate towards darker HRs, and her books are the exact opposite of that.
2.75⭐ Felicity Niven: {Bed Me, Earl by Felicity Niven} (overall rating 2.5 stars, original ranking 30 of 40). I've DNFed all of her books, but I made it three quarters of the way through this one. It's not objectively bad, just not for me.
2.75⭐ Laura Kinsale: {Seize the Fire by Laura Kinsale} (overall rating: none, because I forgot about her, original ranking: uh... also none, because I forgot about her, but she would have been pretty low down. I'm not a fan, clearly). The only one of her books I actually finished. It was not worth it.
2.75⭐ Cheryl St. John: {His Secondhand Bride by Cheryl St. John} (overall rating 2 stars, original ranking 37 of 40). This is the only one of her books I've read. Her writing style wasn't for me, but I did finish it. If you have a recommendation of hers that you think is better, feel free to let me know!
2.75⭐ Maggie Osborne: {The Bride of Willow Creek by Maggie Osborne} (overall rating 2 stars, original ranking 36 of 40). One of only two books of hers I've read. DNFed the other. Barely made it through this one.
2.75⭐ Lynsay Sands: {The Countess by Lynsay Sands} (overall rating 2 stars, original ranking 39 of 40). I'm going to be honest. This is the only book of hers I've read. I started the sequel, realized I didn't care enough to give it a proper try and stopped. So... Not necessarily an accurate reflection of her books overall. She's just not for me.
2.5⭐ J.R. Biery: {The Milch Bride by J.R. Biery} (overall rating 1.5 stars, original ranking 40 of 40). Oh, J.R. Biery, hire an editor, please, I'm begging you! Break out the red pens and invest in a really good spellchecker! The premise is there, the characters could be compelling, but all the spelling and grammar errors really take you out of it. This is the only J.R. Biery book I've read, and I have no desire to read another because the mistakes were painfully glaring.
Bonus: Anne Gracie. I picked up my first Anne Gracie book today! {The Autumn Bride by Anne Gracie}. So far, it's a solid 4 stars, with the potential to go higher depending on if she sticks the landing. I don't think I'd put it much lower, even if the ending doesn't quite deliver, because it's been great so far. Thank you to whoever recommended it earlier today on this sub! My library had it in stock when I went to pick up my weekly book fix, and I decided to take a chance on it. So far, it's worth it! Thank you, kind Redditor who recommended it to someone else, whoever you are!
Corrections/amendments on my last list:
I was definitely too hard on a few authors in my original list (especially Emily Royal. I was mean to her, and I honestly have no idea why. I have regrets. I'm sorry). I was also very hard on Julie Anne Long since I'd literally just finished one of her books that was a huge disappointment, which definitely influenced me rating her so low, but she still isn't, and likely will never be, one of my favorite authors.
On the flip side, I think I was also too nice to Eloisa James and Kerrigan Byrne. Eloisa James was one of my first HR authors, so I'll always have a huge soft spot for her, but I'm not sure she deserved to be ranked so high on my list. Ah, well. Books are subjective. Kerrigan Byrne, I was definitely too nice to. With hindsight, putting her above Stephanie Patterson, Aydra Richards and Lisa Kleypas doesn't line up at all with what I actually think of her books. I do think she's a better writer than Stephanie Patterson and Aydra Richards from a purely technical standpoint, but I don't think her books are actually better.
Also, I forgot Laura Kinsale last time. Based on this list, it's probably clear that I don't really like her. I'd probably have put her somewhere down around Maggie Osborne and Cheryl St. John, so, towards the bottom with about a 2 star rating overall (I'm sorry to those who love it, but I can't stand Flowers from the Storm. Or any of her other books, for that matter, and I've tried several).
Observations and coincidences:
Authors whose rankings didn't change between lists: Candice Proctor (#1 on both, obviously, as she's my all-time favorite HR author and Night in Eden is my all-time favorite HR book), Mimi Matthews (#8), Anne Stuart (#27), J.R. Biery (#40, and the dubious honor of being both my least favorite HR author and book).
Authors who moved around the most: Emily Royal (11 spots up from an undeserved #38 to #29 for Taciturn in the Ton), Erin Langston (11 spots up from #23 overall to #12 for The Finest Print), Lorraine Heath (9 spots up from #19 overall to #10 for Texas Destiny), Stephanie Patterson (8 spots up from #17 overall to #9 for A Terrible Beauty), Lisa Kleypas (7 spots up from #20 overall to #13 for Marrying Winterbourne), Joanna Shupe (7 spots down from #11 overall to #18 for Tycoon), and Amy Barry (7 spots down from #12 overall to #19 for Kit McBride Needs a Wife).
Emily Royal and Erin Langston both had the most upward movement, climbing 11 spots each, but for very different reasons. In Erin Langston's case, it's because The Finest Print is a beautiful, amazing book, but the rest of her body of work just doesn't hold up in comparison. In Emily Royal's case, it's because I was unnecessarily mean to her last time around for no reason. Like, I honestly have no idea why I was so hard on her. She was the author I did the most dirty last time, and I have regrets!
Joanna Shupe and Amy Barry are the authors who moved down the list the most, descending 7 spots each. In Joanna Shupe's case, it's because she's the most reliably 4-star author I've ever encountered, and I mean that as a compliment. Every single one of her books that I've read (I have not read them all yet, but I've read a lot) sits somewhere between 4.25 stars and 3.75 stars. You know exactly what you're going to get with her, and sometimes, that's a good thing.
Same with Amy Barry. Overall, she's a pretty consistent 4-star author, but in comparison to some of the more than 4-star books on this list, I couldn't in good conscience put her best book higher up.
Also, Joanna Shupe and Alexandra Vasti are the only authors on this list (I believe) where I rated a novella above the rest of their books. In Alexandra Vasti's case, it's because I've only read her novellas. In Joanna Shupe's case, it's because I really like Tycoon. I think it's a great little book.
Other random thoughts:
In the case of several authors, I didn't actually put my favorite book of theirs on this list, but what I thought was objectively their best book. My favorite Courtney Milan book is sometimes The Duchess War, and sometimes it's The Countess Conspiracy, but I think, on balance, The Duchess War is a better book (and The Devil Comes Courting has to be up there somewhere too). My favorite Ellen O'Connell book is probably Beautiful Bad Man, but I think Into the Light is objectively a stronger book. And I don't actually have a favorite Mary Balogh book, but I do have a favorite series (The Survivors' Club). And a few other books aren't necessarily my favorites, but what I thought were authors' best books.
Also, because some people were remarking on it on my last list, I described Candice Proctor as a "historian's HR author," meaning that she is a very big history nerd (and has a PhD in history) and gets the small details right. I got a couple questions about other authors like that, so I figured I'd give a few recommendations here. Other authors who I've found get the little things (mostly) right: Joanna Shupe, Sherry Thomas, Joanna Bourne and Mary Balogh.
Joanna Shupe in particular is the best HR author I've come across for getting technology right. She writes mainly late Victorian romances and includes things like showers, telephones, heated swimming pools, ticker tape to track stock market prices, gas lights, electric lights and way more that often get left out of HRs because they don't feel "historical" enough.
Candice Proctor and Joanna Bourne don't shy away from the darker, grittier details of history, and Sherry Thomas and Mary Balogh both clearly put a lot of research into their books (of course, plenty of other authors do, too, but it really shows with them).
Wrapping up:
What do you think of this list in comparison to the last one if you saw it? If you didn't, what do you think of just this one?
What books from this list do you agree are an author's best books, and which ones do you vehemently disagree with (keeping in mind that I haven't read absolutely every book by every one of these authors)?
Was I too nice in some of my ratings this time? Too harsh? Do you think the rankings hold up in comparison to each other this time? Also, what do you think of the authors who moved around a lot? Did they move in the right direction and do the reasons why they moved make sense?