Below is the complete list of Sadie Kincaid’s Bound and Broken books in reading order, presented in publication order for the series. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Bound and Broken Books
as K.C. Moore
- Bound and Shared (2021)
View Book - Bound and Deceived (2022)
View Book - Bound and Tamed (2022)
View Book - Bound and Dominated (2022)
View Book
About Bound and Broken
Sadie Kincaid’s Bound and Broken is not one of her large, world-building series. It is a short, compact line of dark romance shorts, and that smaller scale is the main thing readers need to understand after seeing the order. Retailer and catalog listings describe it as a four-book collection rather than a long-running saga, with the sequence built from Bound and Tamed, Bound and Shared, Bound and Dominated, and Bound and Deceived.
That structure makes publication order especially straightforward here. These books are better thought of as quick linked entries with a shared setup and tone, not as separate standalones gathered under a convenient label. Because the line is so short, the order matters less for complicated world lore than for continuity of premise, relationship dynamics, and the gradual unfolding of the same basic setup across the sequence. In other words, this is a series built for direct progression, just on a much smaller canvas than Kincaid’s better-known mafia or paranormal projects.
One point that deserves careful clarification is authorship credit. Some listings place parts of the series under K.C. Moore alongside Sadie Kincaid, and Goodreads notes that K.C. Moore “also writes as Sadie Kincaid.” That means Bound and Broken sits a little differently in her bibliography from the series published under the Sadie Kincaid name alone. It is still closely tied to her catalog, but it is also one of those cases where pen names and co-crediting can make the series look more confusing than it really is.
That also helps explain the series’ place in her wider body of work. Sadie Kincaid’s official site presents her primarily as a bestselling spicy romance author known for feisty heroines and morally grey male leads, while the Bound and Broken books, as listed by Amazon, are short dark-romance entries collected as a four-book set. So although the line is much smaller than her headline series, it still reflects the broader commercial style associated with her name: intense relationship-focused fiction, dark-romance framing, and fast, reader-oriented momentum.
Because of that, Bound and Broken is best approached with the right expectations. It is not a flagship Sadie Kincaid universe, not a major multi-couple franchise, and not a fantasy or mafia sequence requiring a big commitment. It is a brief, tightly branded set of dark romance shorts. For readers working through her bibliography in order, its value is less in scale than in completeness. It shows another side of her catalog: shorter-form work built around immediacy and mood rather than long-arc expansion.
Seen as a whole, Bound and Broken is best understood as a small linked quartet at the edge of Sadie Kincaid’s larger bibliography. The reading order is simple, but still worth following, because the books appear to be packaged and read as one short sequence rather than as interchangeable pieces under a loose umbrella title.