Rachael Lippincott is a YA romance author whose bibliography is compact, high-profile, and easy to map once you separate the solo books from the collaborations. The most important thing to know is that there is no big interconnected reading order here. Most of the books are standalones, and the only real ongoing sequence is the She Gets the Girl line, which currently consists of the novel plus a later companion novella.

That means the best reading order is usually just publication order. It lets you see her work move from emotional contemporary YA to queer romance, rom-com, and holiday stories without creating false continuity where none exists.
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The practical answer
You can safely start almost anywhere, but these are the clearest entry points:
- Five Feet Apart if you want the breakout emotional contemporary first.
- The Lucky List if you want a solo queer YA romance with a more intimate emotional focus.
- She Gets the Girl if you want her best-known sapphic rom-com collaboration.
- Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh if you want the most playful standalone concept.
Rachael Lippincott books in publication order
- Five Feet Apart (2018, with Mikki Daughtry and Tobias Iaconis): Two teens with cystic fibrosis fall in love under rules that physically keep them apart, making this the book that defined Lippincott’s public launch and remains her best-known starting point.
- All This Time (2020, with Mikki Daughtry): After a devastating accident, the story shifts into grief, survival, and emotional reconstruction, giving this collaboration a heavier and more twist-driven feel than her debut.
- The Lucky List (2021): A grief-centered queer YA romance built around a list left behind by a mother, this is one of her clearest solo entry points and a good pick for readers who want the emotional side of her work without a co-author setup.
- She Gets the Girl (2022, with Alyson Derrick): A sapphic college-adjacent YA rom-com where two very different girls team up, making this one of her most accessible and recommendation-friendly books.
- Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh (2023): A sapphic time-slip romantic comedy with an Austen-inspired premise, this is the most openly high-concept standalone in her catalog.
- Make My Wish Come True (2024, with Alyson Derrick): A Christmas romance built on holiday atmosphere and queer rom-com energy, best read as a standalone rather than as part of a deeper continuity.
- Joy to the Girls (2025, with Alyson Derrick): A novella follow-up to She Gets the Girl, this works best after the main novel because it revisits that world rather than introducing it from scratch.
The only real series
She Gets the Girl
Included. Main novel plus follow-up novella.
- She Gets the Girl (2022): The original novel introduces the full relationship arc and is the required place to begin.
- Joy to the Girls (2025): This later novella returns to that pairing and is best treated as an extra for readers who already liked the original book.
This is the one place in Lippincott’s bibliography where order clearly matters. Read the novel first, then the novella.
Solo books vs. collaborations
If you want the cleanest way to understand her catalog, divide it like this.
Solo novels
- The Lucky List: A grief-and-self-discovery queer YA romance with a quieter emotional structure.
- Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh: A more playful, high-concept sapphic romantic comedy with time-travel elements.
Collaborations with Mikki Daughtry
- Five Feet Apart: The breakout illness-centered love story and still the biggest landmark title.
- All This Time: A darker, twistier emotional contemporary built around loss and aftermath.
Collaborations with Alyson Derrick
- She Gets the Girl: The strongest entry point into their co-written queer rom-com work.
- Make My Wish Come True: A holiday rom-com that stands alone cleanly.
- Joy to the Girls: A novella companion to She Gets the Girl, not a fresh starting point.
Best reading orders by reader type
If you want the most representative path
- Five Feet Apart
- The Lucky List
- She Gets the Girl
- Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh
That order shows the biggest phases of her work without making the catalog feel repetitive.
If you want queer romance first
- The Lucky List
- She Gets the Girl
- Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh
- Make My Wish Come True
- Joy to the Girls
This is the best route if you are here mainly for sapphic YA romance and rom-com.
If you want the safest publication-order route
- Five Feet Apart
- All This Time
- The Lucky List
- She Gets the Girl
- Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh
- Make My Wish Come True
- Joy to the Girls
Because the bibliography is short, this is a very realistic option.
Do you need a chronological order?
No. Rachael Lippincott is not an author where chronology across books matters. The useful distinction is simply standalone vs. She Gets the Girl sequence, not some deeper shared-universe timeline.
Latest release status
The most recent confirmed book in the bibliography is Joy to the Girls from 2025, which extends the She Gets the Girl corner of her catalog rather than launching a brand-new long series. As of the sources checked for this article, her published list is still compact and easy to read in full.
FAQs
What is the best Rachael Lippincott book to start with?
Five Feet Apart is the biggest and most obvious entry point, but The Lucky List is often the cleaner starting choice if you want her solo voice first.
Which Rachael Lippincott books are standalones?
Everything in her bibliography is effectively standalone except Joy to the Girls, which follows She Gets the Girl.
Do I need to read She Gets the Girl before Joy to the Girls?
Yes. Joy to the Girls works as a follow-up, not as an introduction.
Is Pride and Prejudice and Pittsburgh part of a series?
No. It is a standalone, even though some catalog pages group it under its own title heading.
Conclusion
Rachael Lippincott is one of the easier modern YA authors to read in order because the bibliography is small and mostly standalone. Read her in publication order if you want the full arc, or start with Five Feet Apart, The Lucky List, or She Gets the Girl depending on whether you want emotional contemporary, queer coming-of-age romance, or a lighter rom-com first.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

