Below is the complete list of Anne Perry books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Charlotte & Thomas Pitt Books in Publication Order
- The Cater Street Hangman (1979)
View Book - Callander Square (1980)
View Book - Paragon Walk (1981)
View Book - Resurrection Row (1981)
View Book - Rutland Place (1983)
View Book - Bluegate Fields (1984)
View Book - Death in The Devil’s Acre (1985)
View Book - Cardington Crescent (1987)
View Book - Silence in Hanover Close (1988)
View Book - Bethlehem Road (1990)
View Book - Highgate Rise (1991)
View Book - Belgrave Square (1992)
View Book - Farriers’ Lane (1993)
View Book - The Hyde Park Headsman (1994)
View Book - Traitors Gate (1995)
View Book - Pentecost Alley (1996)
View Book - Ashworth Hall (1997)
View Book - Brunswick Gardens (1998)
View Book - Bedford Square (1998)
View Book - Half Moon Street (1998)
View Book - The Whitechapel Conspiracy (2000)
View Book - Southampton Row (2002)
View Book - Seven Dials (2003)
View Book - Long Spoon Lane (2005)
View Book - Buckingham Palace Gardens (2008)
View Book - Betrayal at Lisson Grove / Treason at Lisson Grove (2010)
View Book - Dorchester Terrace (2011)
View Book - Midnight at Marble Arch (2012)
View Book - Death on Blackheath (2014)
View Book - The Angel Court Affair (2015)
View Book - Treachery at Lancaster Gate (2016)
View Book - Murder on the Serpentine (2017)
View Book
Christmas Stories Books in Publication Order
- A Christmas Journey (2003)
View Book - A Christmas Visitor (2004)
View Book - A Christmas Guest (2004)
View Book - A Christmas Secret (2006)
View Book - A Christmas Beginning (2007)
View Book - A Christmas Grace (2008)
View Book - A Christmas Promise (2009)
View Book - A Christmas Odyssey (2010)
View Book - A Christmas Homecoming (2011)
View Book - A Christmas Garland (2012)
View Book - A Christmas Hope (2013)
View Book - A New York Christmas (2014)
View Book - A Christmas Escape (2015)
View Book - A Christmas Message (2016)
View Book - A Christmas Return (2017)
View Book - A Christmas Revelation (2018)
View Book - A Christmas Gathering (2019)
View Book - A Christmas Resolution (2020)
View Book - A Christmas Legacy (2021)
View Book - A Christmas Deliverance (2022)
View Book - A Christmas Vanishing (2023)
View Book
Elena Standish Books in Publication Order
- Death in Focus (2019)
View Book - A Question of Betrayal (2020)
View Book - A Darker Reality (2021)
View Book - A Truth to Lie for (2022)
View Book - A Traitor Among Us (2023)
View Book
Tathea Books in Publication Order
Timepiece Books in Publication Order
- Tudor Rose (2011)
View Book - Rose of No Man’s Land (2011)
View Book - Blood Red Rose (2012)
View Book - Rose Between Two Thorns (2012)
View Book
William Monk Books in Publication Order
- The Face of a Stranger (1990)
View Book - A Dangerous Mourning (1991)
View Book - Defend and Betray (1992)
View Book - A Sudden, Fearful Death (1993)
View Book - Sins of the Wolf (1994)
View Book - Cain His Brother (1995)
View Book - Weighed in the Balance (1996)
View Book - The Silent Cry (1997)
View Book - A Breach of Promise/The Whited Sepulchres (1997)
View Book - The Twisted Root (1998)
View Book - Slaves of Obsession (2000)
View Book - Funeral in Blue (2001)
View Book - Death of a Stranger (2002)
View Book - The Shifting Tide (2004)
View Book - Dark Assassin (2005)
View Book - Execution Dock (2009)
View Book - Acceptable Loss (2011)
View Book - A Sunless Sea (2012)
View Book - Blind Justice (2013)
View Book - Blood on the Water (2014)
View Book - Corridors of the Night (2015)
View Book - Revenge in a Cold River (2016)
View Book - An Echo of Murder (2017)
View Book - Dark Tide Rising (2018)
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World War I Books in Publication Order
- No Graves As Yet (2003)
View Book - Shoulder the Sky (2004)
View Book - Angels in the Gloom (2005)
View Book - At Some Disputed Barricade (2006)
View Book - We Shall Not Sleep (2007)
View Book
Standalone Novels Books in Publication Order
- Fashionable Funeral (1992)
View Book - A Dish Taken Cold (1999)
View Book - The One Thing More (2000)
View Book - Heroes (2007)
View Book - The Sheen on the Silk (2010)
View Book
Non-Fiction Books in Publication Order
- Letters from the Highlands (2004)
View Book
Daniel Pitt Books in Publication Order
with Victoria Zackheim
- Twenty-One Days (2018)
View Book - Triple Jeopardy (2018)
View Book - One Fatal Flaw (2020)
View Book - Death with a Double Edge (2020)
View Book - Three Debts Paid (2022)
View Book - The Fourth Enemy (2022)
View Book - Death Times Seven (2026)
View Book
About Anne Perry
Anne Perry built one of the most substantial bodies of historical crime fiction of the last several decades, and her work is best understood through the scale and consistency of that achievement. Writing under the name Anne Perry, she became especially known for two long-running Victorian mystery series: the Thomas and Charlotte Pitt novels, which began with The Cater Street Hangman in 1979, and the William Monk novels, launched with The Face of a Stranger in 1990. Together, those books established her as a major presence in historical suspense, with a readership drawn not only to murder plots but to the texture of the worlds she created around them.
What distinguished Perry from many other crime writers was her ability to make the social fabric of the nineteenth century feel central rather than decorative. In the Pitt novels, class tension is built into the series from the start. Thomas Pitt, a policeman of modest background, and Charlotte, who comes from a more privileged world, allow the books to move across social boundaries in a way that gives the mysteries unusual range. The novels are not simply puzzles placed in period costume. They are also studies of family structure, power, respectability, and the rules people use to protect themselves from scandal.
The Monk books work differently. Their central premise gives the series a darker, more psychologically uncertain tone. William Monk begins as a man recovering from memory loss, and that instability shapes the series from its opening stretch. If the Pitt novels often explore the pressures of Victorian society from multiple vantage points, the Monk novels can feel more inward, morally troubled, and emotionally exposed. Read together, the two series show Perry’s range within historical crime: one broad and socially observant, the other sharper-edged and more haunted.
Her bibliography extends well beyond those two pillars. She later developed the Daniel Pitt novels, shifting the focus to the next generation, and also wrote a World War I sequence, the Elena Standish books, numerous Christmas mysteries, short fiction, and a smaller number of standalone works. That matters because Perry was never simply repeating one formula. Even when she stayed within mystery conventions, she kept finding new historical angles, new investigative structures, and new emotional stakes. Her fiction consistently returned to questions of conscience, justice, loyalty, and the costs of silence.
Publication order matters with Perry more than it does for many mystery writers because her major series are cumulative. Character relationships deepen gradually, social roles evolve, and the emotional history of the protagonists becomes part of the reading experience. That is especially true in the Pitt and Monk books, where later installments carry more weight when the reader has seen the characters earn their authority, suffer losses, and change over time. The Daniel Pitt novels also make the most sense when read with some awareness of the earlier Pitt world, since part of their interest comes from generational continuity rather than a complete reset.
Perry’s life has often been discussed alongside her fiction because of the notoriety attached to her youth, when, under her birth name Juliet Hulme, she was involved in a murder case in New Zealand. That history became public knowledge long after her writing career was established. It remains part of any full account of her life, but it should not obscure what her bibliography shows on its own terms: remarkable discipline, enormous productivity, and a sustained command of historical crime storytelling.
The best way to understand Anne Perry’s work is to see it as more than a shelf of period mysteries. At her strongest, she wrote novels in which crime exposes the structure of a society. Her books are about guilt, secrecy, ambition, duty, and moral compromise, but also about the institutions people live inside, whether family, class, church, law, or empire. That is why her long publication history rewards reading in order. You are not just following detectives from case to case. You are watching an entire fictional world deepen across decades of work.
