I didn’t plan to fall in love with Taylor Jenkins Reid books. I didn’t even know her name when I stumbled across The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo on a rainy afternoon, tucked into the “Staff Picks” shelf of my local bookstore.
The cover shimmered like a secret waiting to be told. I took it home. I read it in one sitting. I cried. I stared into space for a while. And then I did something I hadn’t done in years—I went back to the beginning.
I read every one of the Taylor Jenkins Reid books, all ten of them, in the order they were published. Each one felt like an excavation—of love, of identity, of the masks we wear and the lives we quietly long for. Each was its own world. Together, they rewired mine.
This is the story of that journey—a love letter to the stories that stayed with me long after the last page.
1. Forever, Interrupted (2013)
The Beginning That Starts at the End
What if the love of your life came and went in just nine days?
That’s what happens to Elsie Porter. One New Year’s Day, she meets Ben Ross. By summer, they’re married. Nine days later, he’s dead—hit by a truck while out on his bike. No time for anniversaries, for routines, for forever.
As Elsie reels from her grief, she meets Susan, Ben’s mother, who had no idea her son was even married. From the raw edges of loss, the two women forge a relationship neither expected. The story moves between past and present, love blooming and grief settling in like fog.
Among all the Taylor Jenkins Reid books, this one hurt the most quietly. It isn’t grand or showy. It simply asks: how do you grieve a future that never got the chance to become real? And when your world has been interrupted mid-sentence, how do you find a new way to speak?
2. After I Do (2014)
The Love Story Told in the Absence of Love
Lauren and Ryan are the couple everyone envies—until they aren’t.
After nearly a decade of marriage, their once-passionate relationship has eroded into silence and eye rolls. Instead of splitting up, they choose something radical: a one-year break, with no contact, to figure out whether they still want a life together.
Left alone, Lauren must redefine herself—not as someone’s wife, not as part of a “we,” but as a “me.” She writes. She laughs. She listens to her body. She discovers who she is when she isn’t trying to be everything to someone else.
There are no villains here. Just a beautifully honest depiction of two people whose love has drifted. Of all the books by Taylor Jenkins Reid, After I Do might be the most personal. It whispers what we’re sometimes afraid to ask out loud: Can love survive space? Or is space the very thing it needs to grow?
3. Maybe in Another Life (2015)
Two Timelines, One Truth
The night Hannah Martin goes out with friends, she faces a seemingly mundane choice: go home with her best friend Gabby or stay a little longer with her ex-boyfriend, Ethan.
In one version, she leaves. In the other, she stays.
From there, the story splits in two, each timeline revealing a wildly different life—different homes, loves, fates, and heartbreaks. One version leads her to comfort and safety. The other to tragedy and grace. Both to clarity.
This is one of the most philosophically playful Taylor Jenkins Reid books. It doesn’t just ask “what if?”—it explores the invisible threads that stitch our choices together. What I loved most wasn’t the dual structure (though it’s brilliant), but the quiet idea that no matter what version of life you live, you’re still you. Still healing. Still hoping.
4. One True Loves (2016)
Two Lives, One Heart
Emma Blair marries Jesse, her high school sweetheart, and they build a beautiful, globe-trotting life together. But on their first anniversary, his helicopter crashes. He’s presumed dead.
Years pass. Emma returns home, and slowly, she begins to live again. She reconnects with Sam, a quiet, kind man from her past. They fall in love. They get engaged.
And then Jesse comes back.
This novel is a quiet earthquake. It explores love not as a fixed point, but as a shifting landscape. You love differently at 23 than you do at 30. So what happens when your past crashes into your present?
Of all the Taylor Jenkins Reid books, One True Loves is the most poignant. It doesn’t villainize either man. It honors both loves. It honors the evolution of the self.
Reading it felt like standing at a crossroads with my own heart.
5. The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo (2017)
The Queen Who Ruled My Soul
Evelyn Hugo, Hollywood legend, recluse, scandal-maker, finally agrees to a tell-all interview. But she doesn’t choose a famous journalist—she chooses Monique Grant, a young, relatively unknown writer.
As Evelyn tells her story—seven husbands, hidden lovers, meteoric fame—we realize her life is far more than headlines. It’s a symphony of ambition, pain, sacrifice, and longing. It’s also, at its core, a queer love story hidden in plain sight.
But Evelyn’s choice of Monique as her biographer isn’t random. It’s the final twist in a legacy filled with quiet detonations.
This was the book that brought me to Taylor Jenkins Reid. It’s glamorous and devastating, like sipping champagne in a burning room. Evelyn is fierce, calculating, vulnerable, unforgettable. This isn’t just one of the best Taylor Jenkins Reid books—it’s one of the best books I’ve ever read.
6. Evidence of the Affair (2018)
Strangers in the Wake of Infidelity
Told entirely through letters, this novella opens with a single spark: a woman writes to a stranger to reveal that their spouses are having an affair.
From this betrayal blossoms something unexpected—a connection built on vulnerability. Carrie and David, two wounded souls, begin exchanging letters that are honest, sharp, and strangely tender. In the space left by broken marriages, they find clarity—and maybe, in the cracks, something like hope.
Short but profound, Evidence of the Affair is the smallest jewel in the Taylor Jenkins Reid collection, but no less radiant. It reminded me that sometimes, the people who save us are the ones we were never meant to meet.
7. Daisy Jones & The Six (2019)
The Band That Never Was but Always Will Be
If Almost Famous and Fleetwood Mac had a baby and gave it a soul, it would be Daisy Jones & The Six.
Told as an oral history, the book chronicles the rise and spectacular implosion of a fictional 1970s rock band. Daisy is the lightning bolt—wild, brilliant, untamable. Billy Dunne is the thunder—disciplined, broken, magnetic. Together, they make music. Together, they almost destroy each other.
Every voice in the band has a version of what happened. And none of them are entirely right—or entirely wrong.
This is one of the most daring Taylor Jenkins Reid books in form and heart. It pulses with addiction, ego, lust, art, and the terrible price of brilliance.
I read it with Spotify open, imagining the songs, the stadiums, the heartbreak echoing from tour buses and hotel balconies.
8. Malibu Rising (2021)
The Night Everything Burned
August 1983. Malibu. The Riva siblings—Nina, Jay, Hud, and Kit—throw their legendary end-of-summer party. By morning, the mansion is ash.
Through one long night and decades of backstory, Malibu Rising unspools the story of four children raised in the shadow of fame. Their father is Mick Riva (yes, from Evelyn Hugo), a singer who left behind more than songs. Their mother, June, was the sea they all tried to return to. But oceans can drown as well as save.
This is a novel of fire and water, of surfing and secrets, of family ties that hold you together—and choke you.
Among the Taylor Jenkins Reid books, it stands out for its imagery: surfboards, firelight, spilled drinks, broken hearts. And always the sea, pulling and pulling.
9. Carrie Soto Is Back (2022)
The Girl Who Refused to Fade
Carrie Soto was the best tennis player the world had ever seen—until she wasn’t.
Now retired, watching her records fall to a younger generation, Carrie decides to do the unthinkable: a comeback at 37. Trained by her beloved father Javier, she prepares to step back into the spotlight and prove she still has it.
But it’s not just about winning. It’s about legacy, ego, aging, womanhood, and the fear of being forgotten.
Carrie is prickly, proud, and powerful—one of the most complex characters in the entire Taylor Jenkins Reid universe. This book made me cheer, cry, and think hard about the ways women are told to shrink once their “prime” has passed.
Carrie refuses to shrink.
And because of her, maybe I do too.
10. Atmosphere (2025)
The Quietest Love Story in Orbit
Set in the early 1980s, against the backdrop of NASA’s shuttle program, Atmosphere follows Joan Goodwin—a brilliant astronomer and the first woman CAPCOM in Mission Control. When Vanessa Ford, the woman she secretly loves, is selected to command a shuttle mission, their unspoken bond is tested by distance, danger, and silence.
The novel flips between Earth and orbit, past and present, love and duty. It’s about the loneliness of brilliance. The longing of women told to hide. And the tender ache of connection, even through static and stars.
More than any of the other Taylor Jenkins Reid books, Atmosphere stunned me with its scope. It’s her most ambitious work yet—a cosmic love story grounded in history, science, and quiet, radical bravery.
Taylor Jenkins Reid Books in Order
- Forever, Interrupted (2013)
- After I Do (2014)
- Maybe in Another Life (2015)
- One True Loves (2016)
- The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo (2017)
- Evidence of the Affair (2018)
- Daisy Jones & The Six (2019)
- Malibu Rising (2021)
- Carrie Soto Is Back (2022)
- Atmosphere (2025)
Final Thoughts: A Storyteller Who Told Mine
Reading through the Taylor Jenkins Reid books wasn’t just a literary exercise—it was a journey back to myself. Through Evelyn’s ruthlessness, Daisy’s recklessness, Emma’s heartbreak, Carrie’s defiance, and Joan’s silence, I found pieces of who I was—and who I could become.
These stories taught me that love is messy. That ambition is holy. That grief is a form of love. And that sometimes, the best stories aren’t the ones that end happily, but the ones that end honestly.
So if you haven’t yet read the books by Taylor Jenkins Reid, you’re not just missing out on great fiction. You’re missing out on a mirror. One that might just show you everything you’ve been too afraid to say.