Jessa Kane’s bibliography is easiest to use if you divide it into three buckets: true series, branded clusters, and standalones.

Most of her books can be read on their own, but a few short runs are much better in sequence.
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The practical rule
Read the true series in publication order. Read the branded groups in publication order if you want the neatest experience. Read the standalones whenever the premise appeals.
For most readers, the best starting points are A Pinch of Sugar if you want a proper series opener, Praise Me: President if you want a current branded run, and The Hitman’s Angel if you just want one representative standalone.
Recommended starting path
- The Hitman’s Angel (2019): A good test-entry standalone because it is self-contained and gives you a clean sense of Kane’s short, high-intensity style.
- A Pinch of Sugar (2020): The safest first series book because it starts one of the clearest connected trilogies in the catalog.
- A Dash of Spice (2020): Best read second so the trilogy’s character and relationship progression lands in the intended order.
- A Serving of Forever (2020): The proper end point for that trilogy and the cleanest first completed Jessa Kane run for new readers.
- The Fighter’s Prize (2020): Opens a short two-book sequence and works best as the first step into another connected set.
- The Kingpin’s Weakness (2020): Follows directly from the first MMA book and is best saved for second.
- Praise Me: President (2024): The right place to begin the newer Praise Me Daily line.
- Praise Me: Princess (2025): Continues that branded sequence in release order.
- Praise Me: Priest (2025): Another entry best read after the first two Praise Me books.
- Praise Me: Soldier (2025): Keeps the current run in its cleanest order.
- Praise Me: Lumberjack (2025): Best approached after the earlier Praise Me titles.
- Praise Me: Pilot (2025): The current end of that sequence and the natural stopping point for now.
The books that clearly belong together
Lights Camera Insta-Love
- A Pinch of Sugar (2020): Starts the trilogy and introduces the setup that the next two books build on.
- A Dash of Spice (2020): Continues the trilogy and works best after book one rather than as a standalone entry.
- A Serving of Forever (2020): Closes the trilogy and delivers the intended payoff to the earlier books.
MMA
- The Fighter’s Prize (2020): Opens this short connected pair and is the correct entry point.
- The Kingpin’s Weakness (2020): Follows the first MMA book and should be read second for best continuity.
She’s Too Young
- She’s Too Young (2016): The first half of a linked pair and the right place to begin that storyline.
- She’s (Still) Too Young (2016): A direct continuation that reads best after the opener.
Vows
- Making Their Vows (2021): Begins the pair and sets up the relationship arc the second book extends.
- Renewing Their Vows (2021): Works as the follow-up and belongs after the first book.
Praise Me Daily
- Praise Me: President (2024): The opener for the current Praise Me Daily sequence and the best place to start it.
- Praise Me: Princess (2025): Continues the run in straightforward release order.
- Praise Me: Priest (2025): Another linked entry best read after the earlier books in the line.
- Praise Me: Soldier (2025): Keeps the sequence intact if read in publication order.
- Praise Me: Lumberjack (2025): Best read after Soldier as part of the same branded set.
- Praise Me: Pilot (2025): The latest confirmed book in the series and the current end point.
Big Boys
This one is best treated as a branded cluster rather than a deep serial storyline, but publication order is still the easiest reading order.
- Husky (2020): Starts the Big Boys label and sets the tone for the group.
- Hefty (2020): Fits naturally after Husky as another entry in the same branded subset.
- Burly (2020): Continues the line and is simplest to place in release order.
- Bulky (2021): Extends the Big Boys run and is best read after the earlier entries.
- Colossal (2025): A later addition to the same grouping and the best book to save for last within it.
Standalones in publication order
These are the books you can usually read whenever you want.
- JAILBAIT (2016): An early standalone that shows the sharper edge of Kane’s earliest catalog.
- Pound of Flesh (2016): Another early one-off built around a concentrated central premise rather than series continuity.
- Her 2 Protectors (2017): A self-contained story that can be read without any other Jessa Kane book first.
- Don’t Look (2018): A standalone with no reading-order barrier attached to it.
- The Husband Sitter (2018): A premise-led novella that works independently from the rest of the bibliography.
- An Innocent Obsession (2019): A one-book entry built for immediate payoff rather than wider continuity.
- Preacher Man (2019): A self-contained story that works well as mood reading.
- The Hitman’s Angel (2019): One of the better single-book entry points for new readers.
- Sacrificed to the Beast (2019): A standalone with a strong hook and no series baggage.
- The Mobster’s Masseuse (2019): A contained novella you can read at any point.
- Wearing Him Down (2019): Another one-off built around a direct relationship setup.
- His Forbidden Obsession (2019): A standalone that does not require any surrounding books for context.
- The Loner’s Lady (2019): An independent title that fits comfortably anywhere in your reading.
- His Outlaw Valentine (2020): A standalone that is easiest to treat as a single-sitting read.
- The Farmer’s Daughter (2020): A one-book story with no continuity requirement beyond itself.
- The Perfect Gift (2020): A compact standalone that works best as a quick mood pick.
- His Little Secret (2020): Another self-contained novella with flexible placement.
- His Prize Pupil (2020): A direct-premise standalone that does not depend on other books.
- Daddy’s Worst Nightmare (2020): A self-contained read with no larger series framework.
- His Summer Intern (2020): A one-book setup that works independently.
- Their Summer Intern (2020): Related in title to another book, but still best treated as its own separate read.
- Suddenly His (2020): A fast standalone designed for immediate immersion rather than long setup.
- King Sized (2020): A self-contained novella that fits anywhere in a flexible reading order.
- My Husband, My Stalker (2020): A one-off with a strong central hook and no outside reading requirement.
- Stepbrother’s Secret (2020): A standalone that can be picked up purely by premise.
- Queen Sized (2020): Another independent entry with no need for series context.
- In His Custody (2020): A self-contained title that stands on its own.
- The Pitcher’s Assistant (2020): A sports-adjacent standalone that does not rely on a connected sequence.
- An Angel for the Devil (2021): A standalone that works cleanly as an individual read.
- My Best Friend, My Stalker (2021): Another one-book premise with no continuity barrier.
- Coach’s Daughter (2021): A self-contained title that fits anywhere in the catalog.
- Breaking the Bully (2021): A standalone better approached by interest than by sequence.
- Bossed Around (2021): A one-book read with no larger order requirement.
- Step Stalker (2021): A self-contained novella built around a single strong premise.
- Daring the Doctor (2021): Another independent story that can be read at any time.
- The Way She Burns (2021): A standalone that does not ask for prior reading.
- Caught by the Convicts (2021): A high-concept one-off with no wider continuity attached.
- Coaxing the Roughneck (2021): A self-contained romance that works as pure mood reading.
- Bayou Bruiser (2021): A standalone with flexible placement in the catalog.
- Bewitching the Boss (2021): An individual novella that does not depend on any companion book.
- Tutoring the Delinquent (2021): Another one-off that can be read whenever it appeals.
- Temp (2022): A self-contained title that does not require earlier books.
- Truck Driver (2022): A standalone built for direct entry without setup.
- A Baby for the Boss (2022): A one-book story with no connected-series requirement.
- Do Me a Favor (2022): Another compact standalone with flexible placement.
- The Boss’s Runaway (2022): A self-contained novella that works independently.
- Property of Pops (2022): A standalone that is best treated as its own reading experience.
- As If I Wouldn’t Fall (2022): A one-off title that does not appear to need surrounding books.
- Enticing the Scrooge (2022): A seasonal-feeling standalone that can be read at any time.
- When the Farmer Met the City Girl (2023): A premise-led standalone with no larger continuity burden.
- When You Know (2023): An independent novella that works without prior reading.
- Debutante’s Curse (2023): A self-contained entry best approached on its own terms.
- Blaste from the Past (2023): A later standalone that does not depend on any sequence around it.
- My Stalker, My Protector (2023): Another flexible one-book read built around a direct central hook.
- A One Woman Job (2024): A standalone that can be read without any catalog knowledge.
- A One Man Job (2024): Title-adjacent to the previous book, but still best treated as its own separate read.
- A Method to His Madness (2025): A later standalone that sits outside the clearer series groupings.
- The Gift That Keeps On Giving (2025): A self-contained novella with no reading-order pressure.
- Moby (2025): A later one-off that belongs with the standalones rather than a numbered series.
- Resisting the Roommate (2026): One of the newest confirmed releases and an easy modern entry point.
- Debt Ridden (2026): A recent standalone that can be read without any preparation.
- The Girlfriend Treatment (2026): The latest confirmed standalone in the current catalog and another flexible place to jump in.
Collections and reprint-style volumes
These are optional, not essential.
- More than a Crush (2022): A collection-format release that is best viewed as convenience reading rather than a new continuity step.
- More to Love (2022): A bundle of previously released stories, so it is not the place to start if you want a clean original-order read.
- More than Innocent (2022): Another optional collection volume that is easiest to leave until after you know the catalog better.
Shared-world note
Pretty Daring (2019): Jessa Kane’s contribution to the multi-author Rags to Riches world, so it belongs in separate continuity rather than a Jessa Kane-only series order.
Do you need a chronological order?
Not really. For Jessa Kane, chronological order adds very little because the bibliography is mostly standalones and short linked runs. Publication order is the useful order whenever a series is involved.
Where to start
Start with A Pinch of Sugar if you want a true sequence. Start with The Hitman’s Angel if you want one strong standalone. Start with Praise Me: President if you want the newer branded run first.
Latest release status
The newest confirmed Jessa Kane releases currently showing in catalog sources are Resisting the Roommate (2026), Debt Ridden (2026), and The Girlfriend Treatment (2026), with The Girlfriend Treatment appearing as the latest confirmed title at the moment.
Final recommendation
For most readers, the best route is simple: read the short series in publication order and treat the rest as standalones. The cleanest first choice is A Pinch of Sugar for a series opener or The Hitman’s Angel for a one-book sample.
Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.

