Reading order
| # | Title | Published | Author | Buy on Amazon |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The Brown Fields | 1951 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 2 | Dangerous Intruder | 1951 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 3 | Young Bar | 1952 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 4 | A Day Like Spring | 1953 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 5 | Dear Tom | 1954 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 6 | A Secret to Tell | 1955 | Rosamunde Pilcher | N/A |
| 7 | Bridge of Corvie | 1956 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 8 | A Family Affair | 1958 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 9 | A Long Way from Home | 1963 | Rosamunde Pilcher | N/A |
| 10 | The Keeper’s House | 1963 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 11 | On My Own | 1965 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 12 | Sleeping Tiger | 1967 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 13 | Another View | 1969 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 14 | The End of Summer | 1971 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 15 | Snow in April | 1972 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 16 | The Empty House | 1973 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 17 | The Day of the Storm | 1975 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 18 | Under Gemini | 1976 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 19 | Wild Mountain Thyme | 1979 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 20 | The Carousel | 1982 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 21 | Voices in Summer | 1984 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 22 | The Shell Seekers | 1987 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 23 | September | 1990 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 24 | Coming Home | 1995 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
| 25 | Winter Solstice | 2000 | Rosamunde Pilcher | Buy |
Rosamunde Pilcher published 25 standalone novels between 1951 and 2000. Her early work, starting with The Brown Fields and Dangerous Intruder (both 1951), established her as a writer of romantic fiction set in the British Isles. Over the decades her books grew longer and more ambitious.
The Shell Seekers (1987) was her biggest commercial success, followed by September (1990) and Coming Home (1995). Her final novel, Winter Solstice (2000), is set in Scotland during the Christmas season. Many of her books were adapted for film and television, especially in Germany where she had an enormous readership.