Below is the complete list of Tim LaHaye’s & Jerry B. Jenkins’ Left Behind books in order. For this series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.
Publication Order of Left Behind Books
with Jerry B. Jenkins
Publication Order of Before They Were Left Behind Books
with Jerry B. Jenkins
Publication Order of Left Behind: The Kids Books
with Jerry B. Jenkins, Chris Fabry
Publication Order of Left Behind: The Kids Collection Books
with Jerry B. Jenkins, Chris Fabry
About Left Behind
The Left Behind series is an apocalyptic Christian fiction saga created by Tim LaHaye and written with Jerry B. Jenkins, using a particular evangelical interpretation of biblical end-times prophecy as the framework for a global thriller. The original twelve-book sequence begins with the sudden disappearance of millions of people in the Rapture and follows the seven-year Tribulation that comes afterward. Its scale is deliberately expansive: aviation disasters, political upheaval, religious conversion, supernatural judgments, global communications, and the rise of a charismatic world leader all become parts of one continuous narrative.
At the human center of the story are characters such as airline pilot Rayford Steele and journalist Cameron “Buck” Williams, whose lives are transformed by the disappearances. Along with Chloe Steele and pastor Bruce Barnes, they become associated with the Tribulation Force, a network resisting the increasingly authoritarian power of Nicolae Carpathia. Carpathia develops into the series’ central earthly antagonist, embodying the Antichrist within LaHaye’s prophetic scheme. The conflict therefore operates on two levels at once: an international struggle involving governments, technology, loyalty, and survival, and a spiritual struggle in which characters are forced to decide what they believe.
The opening novel, Left Behind, establishes that structure through immediate chaos rather than lengthy theological preparation. Aboard a flight to London, Rayford discovers that passengers have vanished from their seats, while similar disappearances have occurred around the world. The mystery quickly becomes the foundation for a much longer story. Tribulation Force expands the organized response of the central characters, and Nicolae brings Carpathia’s ascent more firmly into focus. Later novels progressively move through the prophetic timeline toward increasingly severe judgments and open confrontation.
One reason the sequence feels more tightly connected than many long-running thriller series is that it was conceived around a finite span of story time. Jenkins has explained that the project began with a one-book deal intended to cover the Rapture and seven-year Tribulation, but the narrative expanded as the authors realized how little of that period a single novel could contain. The original sequence ultimately grew to twelve books, ending with Glorious Appearing. The major novels are therefore installments in one unfolding crisis rather than independent adventures that repeatedly reset their characters and conflicts.
The wider structure can appear confusing because the original twelve novels are not the entirety of the adult saga. Three prequels—The Rising, The Regime, and The Rapture—move backward to explore events and characters before the opening of Left Behind. Kingdom Come then functions as the capstone sequel to the principal story. This is why the adult series is sometimes discussed as a sixteen-title body of work even though the publisher separately identifies twelve books as the original series, three as prequels, and Kingdom Come as the sequel.
The franchise also extends into related branches that should not be confused with the core adult novels. Left Behind: The Kids follows the Young Trib Force and parallels the larger end-times chronology for younger readers, while Left Behind: Apocalypse uses a military-centered cast. These connected lines demonstrate how extensively the original premise expanded, but they operate as distinct series rather than necessary numbered chapters of the central twelve-book narrative.
What gives Left Behind its particular identity is the fusion of popular suspense with openly stated theological conviction. LaHaye supplied the prophetic framework rooted in his long career as a minister and Bible-prophecy writer, while Jenkins shaped the concept through serialized fiction and multiple viewpoint characters. The resulting books are not neutral speculative exercises about an imaginary apocalypse; they dramatize beliefs their creators treated seriously. That combination of thriller pacing, continuing character arcs, geopolitical catastrophe, and a predetermined prophetic destination explains both the series’ enormous reach and the unusually strong reactions it has generated among readers.
































































