Lisa Jewell Books In Order

Below is the complete list of Lisa Jewell books in order. For each series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.

Publication Order of Marvel Crime Books

  1. Breaking the Dark (2024)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Breaking the Dark was published in 2024 and is listed as book #1 in the Marvel Crime series.

Publication Order of The Family Upstairs Books

  1. The Family Upstairs (2019)
    by Lisa Jewell
    The Family Upstairs was published in 2019 and is listed as book #1 in the The Family Upstairs series.
  2. The Family Remains (2022)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Published in 2022, The Family Remains is listed as book #2 in the The Family Upstairs series.

Publication Order of Ralph’s Party Books

  1. Ralph’s Party (1999)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Ralph’s Party was published in 1999 and is listed as book #1 in the Ralph’s Party series.
  2. After the Party (2010)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Published in 2010, After the Party is listed as book #2 in the Ralph’s Party series.

Publication Order of Standalone Books

  1. Thirtynothing (2000)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Thirtynothing was published in 2000 and is listed as book #1 in the Standalone series.
  2. One-Hit Wonder (2000)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Published in 2000, One-Hit Wonder is listed as book #2 in the Standalone series.
  3. Roommates Wanted / 31 Dream Street (2000)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Roommates Wanted / 31 Dream Street is a 2000 release and appears as book #3 in the Standalone series.
  4. A Friend of the Family (2003)
    by Lisa Jewell
    In the Standalone series, A Friend of the Family is book #4 and was published in 2003.
  5. Vince & Joy (2005)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Vince & Joy was first published in 2005; within the Standalone series, it is listed as book #5.
  6. The Truth About Melody Browne (2009)
    by Lisa Jewell
    The Truth About Melody Browne was published in 2009 and is listed as book #6 in the Standalone series.
  7. The Making of Us (2011)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Published in 2011, The Making of Us is listed as book #7 in the Standalone series.
  8. Before I Met You (2012)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Before I Met You is a 2012 release and appears as book #8 in the Standalone series.
  9. The House We Grew Up In (2013)
    by Lisa Jewell
    In the Standalone series, The House We Grew Up In is book #9 and was published in 2013.
  10. The Third Wife (2014)
    by Lisa Jewell
    The Third Wife was first published in 2014; within the Standalone series, it is listed as book #10.
  11. The Girls / The Girls in the Garden (2015)
    by Lisa Jewell
    The Girls / The Girls in the Garden was published in 2015 and is listed as book #11 in the Standalone series.
  12. I Found You (2016)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Published in 2016, I Found You is listed as book #12 in the Standalone series.
  13. Then She Was Gone (2018)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Then She Was Gone is a 2018 release and appears as book #13 in the Standalone series.
  14. Watching You (2018)
    by Lisa Jewell
    In the Standalone series, Watching You is book #14 and was published in 2018.
  15. Invisible Girl (2020)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Invisible Girl was first published in 2020; within the Standalone series, it is listed as book #15.
  16. The Night She Disappeared (2021)
    by Lisa Jewell
    The Night She Disappeared was published in 2021 and is listed as book #16 in the Standalone series.
  17. None of This Is True (2023)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Published in 2023, None of This Is True is listed as book #17 in the Standalone series.
  18. Don’t Let Him In (2025)
    by Lisa Jewell
    Don’t Let Him In is a 2025 release and appears as book #18 in the Standalone series.
  19. It Could Have Been Her (2026)
    by Lisa Jewell
    In the Standalone series, It Could Have Been Her is book #19 and was published in 2026.

About Lisa Jewell

Lisa Jewell is a British novelist whose career has moved from sharply observed contemporary fiction into psychological suspense, making her bibliography unusually broad for an author now strongly associated with thrillers. Born in London, she published her debut novel, Ralph’s Party, in 1999 after a period of redundancy prompted an unexpected turn toward writing. The book became the bestselling debut novel of that year in the United Kingdom and established Jewell as a writer with a strong instinct for complicated relationships, flawed characters, and the tensions hidden inside apparently ordinary lives.

Her route into fiction was not the product of a long-planned literary career. Jewell had worked as a secretary and in the fashion industry before losing her job in the 1990s. She has described how a friend challenged her to write the opening chapters of a novel, an experiment that eventually became Ralph’s Party. That unconventional beginning is significant because her early books developed around social groups, romantic entanglements, families, friendships, and urban life rather than the crime-centered material that would later define her international reputation.

Novels such as Thirtynothing, Vince and Joy, and 31 Dream Street belong to this earlier phase, when Jewell was commonly placed within contemporary women’s fiction and romantic comedy. Yet even these books show qualities that remained important after her work darkened: close attention to domestic spaces, an interest in people carrying private disappointments, and a tendency to connect several lives within the same narrative. After the Party later returned to characters from Ralph’s Party, making those two novels one of the relatively rare direct continuities in a body of work dominated by standalones.

The shift toward darker fiction emerged gradually rather than through a single abrupt reinvention. Books including The House We Grew Up In and The Third Wife placed greater pressure on family secrets, damaged relationships, absence, memory, and the consequences of concealed histories. By I Found You and Then She Was Gone, mystery and psychological suspense had become central to Jewell’s work. The latter, built around a mother confronting the unresolved disappearance of her daughter, became one of her best-known novels and helped expand her readership well beyond the audience for her earlier contemporary fiction.

Jewell’s mature suspense novels are notable for how often danger grows from familiar environments rather than distant or exotic settings. Homes, marriages, schools, neighborhoods, friendships, and chance encounters become unstable once different versions of the past begin to compete. She frequently works with multiple viewpoints and shifting timelines, allowing information to arrive unevenly and forcing the reader to reassess characters as new details surface. Watching You, Invisible Girl, and The Night She Disappeared each use variations of this approach without belonging to a conventional recurring-detective series.

The Family Upstairs is one of the important exceptions to Jewell’s predominantly standalone bibliography. Its story continues in The Family Remains, so the two books are best understood together even though much of her wider work can be read independently. None of This Is True further strengthened her standing in psychological suspense through a story shaped by identity, manipulation, storytelling, and the unstable boundary between a recorded narrative and what actually happened. More recent novels, including Don’t Let Him In, continue her focus on deception and the vulnerability created when trust is placed in the wrong person.

Across more than two decades of publishing, Jewell has become a number-one New York Times and Sunday Times bestselling author, with millions of copies sold internationally and translations in more than thirty languages. Her bibliography is best understood as an evolution rather than a single uniform category: the early relationship-driven novels, the increasingly shadowed domestic dramas of the middle period, and the psychological thrillers for which she is now most widely known. What connects those phases is her sustained interest in ordinary people whose private histories are far less settled than they first appear.

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