What Is The Reading Order For The Hockey Alpha'S Only Series?

2025-10-16 00:03:39 237

5 Answers

Samuel
Samuel
2025-10-17 19:39:41
If you want a no-nonsense guide: follow the books by their numbers. Read Book 1, then the 1.5 novella, then Book 2, the 2.5 short, and finally Book 3 plus any epilogue. The decimal entries are designed to live between the main novels — they’re not fluff, they’re connective tissue. I usually tuck holiday or bonus scenes after the main series unless they’re explicitly labeled as happening mid-series. I get more out of the emotional beats when I keep that order, and it keeps the relationships believable rather than rushed.
Xander
Xander
2025-10-17 23:29:21
I've put together a simple roadmap I use whenever I reread 'The Hockey Alpha's Only' so I don't get lost between novellas and main novels.

Start with Book 1 (the core novel) to meet the leads and set the tone. Next, read the 1.5 novella — the short usually labeled with a decimal expands on an off-ice scene and builds emotional context. Then go on to Book 2, followed by any 2.5 short that explores side characters or a road-trip chapter. Finish the main arc with Book 3, and slot the epilogue/extra short at the very end to close loose threads. If there are character-specific mini-POVs or holiday shorts published later, I treat those as bonus treats after the main trilogy.

I prefer this publication/numbered order because the decimals were written to be read between the numbered books; they patch emotional beats and make character arcs land better. Reading it this way always feels like watching a full season: main episodes, mid-episode webisodes, then the finale — cozy and satisfying.
Ella
Ella
2025-10-19 08:24:25
For a breezy roadmap: read the numbered books in order and insert the decimals where they fall. So it's Book 1, then 1.5 (the novella), Book 2, then 2.5, and finally Book 3 plus any epilogue. Those .5 pieces often capture side scenes or healing moments between big plot beats and make the main books feel richer.

If there’s a spin-off focusing on another player, I treat that as optional after the trilogy unless it’s explicitly tied to a specific book. I usually listen to the novellas too — the shorter chapters often have great voice work and it deepens the romance. Following that sequence keeps the pacing right and gives me my favorite small, tender scenes right when I want them.
Zane
Zane
2025-10-22 13:34:53
If you’re diving into 'The Hockey Alpha's Only', I usually recommend following the numbering: Book 1, then any 1.5 novella, then Book 2, then 2.5, and so on. The author tends to place little novellas or short scenes as decimals for a reason — they slot directly between the main installments and often clarify a character decision or show an important side event that the numbered books skip.

Some readers like to collect all the extras and read them after finishing the whole trilogy for uninterrupted momentum, but I find that makes emotional payoffs hit less hard. Also, if there are spin-off books focusing on other players, treat those as optional detours; you can read them after the core set or drop into them after the book that introduces the spun-off character. Personally, reading in-number order keeps the pacing and character growth tight, and I always finish feeling like I didn’t miss a single locker-room confession.
Wynter
Wynter
2025-10-22 15:09:14
Late-night rereads have taught me to treat 'The Hockey Alpha's Only' like a serialized drama: the author sprinkled little interludes that matter. My go-to sequence is publication/numbered order — Book 1, 1.5 (novella), Book 2, 2.5 (short), Book 3, then any epilogue or extras. If there’s a prequel or a flashback novella released after the trilogy, I usually read it after the main arc because it spoils some reveals; however, if you prefer chronological in-universe order and the prequel is clearly labeled as such, you can start there for a different experience.

Also, for audiobook listeners: match the same numbering and don’t skip the decimals — narrators often give subtle character cues in those shorter pieces. Reading that way keeps character growth smooth and the locker-room chemistry believable. I always feel more invested when I follow the author’s numbered roadmap.
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