Jennifer Weiner’s fiction is mostly standalone adult novels, with two exceptions where order really helps:

- one continuing story about Cannie Shapiro, and
- one middle-grade series about a Bigfoot friend group.
Everything else can be read in any sequence, so your “best” order depends on whether you want career progression (publication order) or a mood-based entry point.
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A bookshelf-style map of her work
If you want the only truly spoiler-sensitive route:
Read the Cannie Shapiro books in order.
If you’re reading with kids (or want something lighter and adventurous):
Read The Littlest Bigfoot trilogy in order.
If you’re here for the adult novels:
You can start anywhere, but publication order shows her range expanding over time.
Cannie Shapiro books in order
- Good in Bed: A plus-size columnist becomes famous for writing about a breakup, then has to live with the attention and the truth beneath it.
- Certain Girls: Cannie returns older, a mother, and forced to rethink what “having it together” even means.
- Good Men: A short prequel-style story that zooms in on the choices and blind spots of the men around Cannie.
The Littlest Bigfoot books in order
- The Littlest Bigfoot: A lonely girl at a new school meets a young Bigfoot and finally finds someone who feels like home.
- Little Bigfoot, Big City: Friendship gets bigger and riskier as the Bigfoot dream of being seen collides with human reality.
- The Bigfoot Queen: A leadership challenge turns personal, and the girls have to decide what they’ll protect, and what they’ll reveal.
Adult novels in publication order
These are separate continuities unless noted above, so you can dip in anywhere.
- In Her Shoes: Two very different sisters are forced into each other’s lives and discover how family can hurt and heal at the same time.
- Little Earthquakes: Four women move through friendship, pregnancy, and upheaval, learning how support can look messy and still be real.
- Goodnight Nobody: A suburban mom stumbles into a mystery and realizes boredom can hide danger in plain sight.
- Best Friends Forever: Two former best friends reunite when health and regret force them to face what they did to each other.
- Fly Away Home: A political marriage fractures, and the women caught in its orbit have to rebuild their lives without the script.
- Then Came You: A guarded woman and a complicated love story collide when past history refuses to stay in the past.
- The Next Best Thing: A young woman in TV comedy tries to move forward after loss, only to find grief doesn’t follow neat timing.
- All Fall Down: A woman’s private struggle turns public, and recovery becomes the real plotline.
- Who Do You Love: Two people keep crossing paths across decades, testing whether timing is destiny or just chance.
- Mrs. Everything: Two sisters grow up in the mid-20th century and spend their lives negotiating ambition, identity, and what freedom costs.
- Everyone’s a Critic: A sharp-tongued critic and a woman who’s tired of being judged collide in a story about art, reputation, and reinvention.
- Big Summer: A wedding weekend becomes a pressure test for friendship, popularity, and how the internet remembers you.
- That Summer: A beach-town friendship turns into a reckoning with what people will excuse, and what they won’t.
- The Summer Place: A blended family gathers, and the secrets everyone thinks they’re hiding show up anyway.
- The Breakaway: A group bike trip becomes a moving confessional about love, aging, and the stories people carry.
- The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits: Fame, music, and sisterhood clash when a band’s past resurfaces and demands a second look.
Nonfiction and collections
These are best treated as their own shelf, read anytime.
- Hungry Heart: Essays that blend reading life, body politics, and personal history into a voice-first collection.
- The Guy Not Taken: A set of shorter pieces focused on romantic misfires, sharp turns, and emotional aftershocks.
A calm, practical “what should I read first” answer
- If you want the most iconic entry: Good in Bed.
- If you want a one-book commitment with sister dynamics: In Her Shoes or Mrs. Everything.
- If you want a modern starting point: Big Summer, then keep going forward.
- If you’re reading with kids: start with The Littlest Bigfoot and go in order.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

