Beth Harbison Books in Order (Updated March 5, 2026)

Beth Harbison is the pen name of Elizabeth Harbison, and under the “Beth” name she writes contemporary women’s fiction, smart, funny, and often built around friendship, reinvention, and the awkward truths people avoid until they can’t.

Beth Harbison Books in Order (Updated March 5, 2026)

Most of these books are standalones. The main exception is her Shoe Addict set, which keeps the same core friend-group energy and is best read in sequence.

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A different way to choose your starting point

Start with a vibe, not a rule:

  • Want her most “classic Beth Harbison” voice (friendship + life reset)? Try Hope in a Jar.
  • Want food as the engine of the story (plus recipes)? Try The Cookbook Club.
  • Want a connected mini-run with recurring characters and a shared hook? Start with Shoe Addicts Anonymous and read forward.
  • Want the newest full-length novel (as of now)? Go to Confessions of the Other Sister.

The Shoe Addict books (best read in order)

Shoe Addicts Anonymous (2007): Four women with one shared weakness, beautiful shoes, collide in a story where the “addiction” is funny until it starts exposing what each of them is really trying to numb.

Secrets of a Shoe Addict (2008): The shoe obsession is still there, but the story digs deeper into the private lives behind the purchases, money, relationships, and the lies people tell to keep the image intact.

A Shoe Addict’s Christmas (2016): A holiday coda that leans warm and festive, bringing back the shoe-loving world for seasonal chaos, romantic tension, and a reminder that habits don’t magically disappear in December.


Beth Harbison standalone novels (publication order)

  1. Hope in a Jar (2009): Two estranged friends reunite around a high school reunion, and the real plot becomes the reckoning with who they were, who they pretended to be, and what they still want.
  2. Thin, Rich, Pretty (2010): A sharp look at beauty, status, and self-worth, where the things people chase to feel “enough” start turning into traps.
  3. Always Something There to Remind Me (2011): A story about memory and momentum, how the past keeps tapping you on the shoulder, especially when you’re trying to build a new future.
  4. When in Doubt, Add Butter (2012): A woman at a crossroads uses cooking as a lifeline, and the book turns food into both comfort and a map back to herself.
  5. Chose the Wrong Guy, Gave Him the Wrong Finger (2013): A breakup is the inciting incident, but the real arc is the main character’s messy, funny push toward independence and better choices.
  6. Driving with the Top Down (2014): A road trip novel where distance creates clarity, old friendships, new connections, and the truth that reinvention is easier to imagine than to live.
  7. A Girl Like Her (2015): A woman tries to rebuild her life and identity after upheaval, discovering that “starting over” doesn’t work unless you change the patterns that got you stuck.
  8. If I Could Turn Back Time (2015): A second-chance premise focused on regret and revision, what you’d fix if you could, and what you can’t undo even with the best intentions.
  9. One Less Problem Without You (2016): A relationship reset that’s less about revenge and more about relief, learning how quiet can feel like freedom after emotional noise.
  10. Every Time You Go Away (2018): A story about longing and unfinished business, where the pull of the past competes with the life the heroine is trying to build now.
  11. The Cookbook Club (2020): A friendship-and-food novel where a group forms around shared meals, and the recipes sit alongside the bigger theme: how community can change what you’re capable of facing.
  12. Confessions of the Other Sister (2022): Two very different sisters are forced into close contact, and the book becomes a layered family story about invisibility, resentment, and the grudging work of understanding each other.

Short fiction and “extras” (optional)

Lost Chapter from Always Something There to Remind Me (2019): A brief add-on for readers who want one more beat from that world, best saved until after the novel.


Separate shelf: books published under “Elizabeth Harbison”

Elizabeth Harbison has also published category romance and other work under her real name. Those books are not required for the Beth Harbison reading experience, and they don’t form a single continuity with the contemporary women’s fiction listed above.

If you’re here specifically for “Beth Harbison,” you can safely skip that earlier catalogue unless you already enjoy category romance.


Latest release status

As of March 5, 2026, the most recent widely listed full-length Beth Harbison novel is Confessions of the Other Sister (2022). I did not find a reliably confirmed newer novel title and date beyond that.


What most readers should do

If you want a connected run, read the Shoe Addict books in order starting with Shoe Addicts Anonymous (2007).
If you want a standalone that represents her core strengths, start with Hope in a Jar (2009) or The Cookbook Club (2020), then pick the next premise that matches your mood.

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Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.