Kasie West Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-06)

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Kasie West writes mostly feel-good romance with quick banter and high-school-to-early-adult stakes. The good news: most of her books are true standalones. The only time you need to think about order is when you’re reading one of her two connected series.

Kasie West Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-06)

If you want the simplest approach, read by publication order. If you want the fastest “what should I try first?” answer, use the start picks below.


Start picks that match your mood

  • Want romance with a twisty premise (and real series continuity)? Start with Pivot Point.
  • Want a friend-group arc across multiple books, still light and romantic? Start with Love, Life, and the List.
  • Want a one-book tryout with classic Kasie West energy? Start with P.S. I Like You or The Fill-In Boyfriend.
  • Want her most recent YA releases first? Begin with Borrow My Heart and read forward.
  • Want what’s next? Jump to the “Latest and upcoming” section.

The two series where order matters

Pivot Point Duology

  1. Pivot Point (2013): A girl who can see alternate outcomes has to pick a future when both choices hurt someone she loves.
  2. Split Second (2014): The fallout of that decision forces a new choice, this time with bigger stakes and fewer safe exits.

Love, Life, and the List Trilogy

  1. Love, Life, and the List (2017): A summer “get my life together” list turns into a romance that keeps derailing the plan, in a good way.
  2. Fame, Fate, and the First Kiss (2019): A brush with celebrity attention puts a relationship under a spotlight neither teen asked for.
  3. Moment of Truth (2020): A public-facing friendship tests what’s real when reputations start shaping decisions.

Standalone novels in publication order

These are not numbered series. Read any one, anywhere, without getting spoiled by another.

  1. The Distance Between Us (2013): A girl working in her family’s shop keeps running into the wealthy boy who makes her walls feel temporary.
  2. On the Fence (2014): A sports-loving tomboy starts seeing her longtime neighbor differently, and it scares her more than any game.
  3. The Fill-In Boyfriend (2015): A prom-night disaster leads to an impulsive “borrow a boy” decision that spirals into real feelings.
  4. P.S. I Like You (2016): Anonymous notes and song lyrics traded in a classroom pull two rivals into a private, tender connection.
  5. By Your Side (2017): Being locked in a library overnight forces two teens to talk honestly when they’d rather joke and deflect.
  6. Lucky in Love (2017): Winning the lottery should fix everything, until a girl learns money can’t edit her real problems.
  7. Listen to Your Heart (2018): A podcast project turns messy when a girl’s advice to others forces her to face her own romantic truth.
  8. Maybe This Time (2019): Over one year of school events, a girl keeps colliding with the same boy until denial stops working.
  9. Sunkissed (2021): A summer at a family camp becomes a reset button for a girl juggling burnout, responsibility, and first love.
  10. Places We’ve Never Been (2022): An unexpected trip changes a friendship’s shape, forcing two people to admit what’s been building for years.
  11. Borrow My Heart (2023): A shy girl lands in a bold situation where love shows up through small, consistent acts of care.
  12. Better Than Revenge (2024): A heartbreak pushes a girl toward payback, then she has to decide what kind of person she wants to be.
  13. We Met Like This (2025): A meet-cute becomes something steadier when two teens realize timing is its own obstacle.

Novellas and short fiction

  • Lonely Hearts Day (2024, short story): A quick, holiday-timed romance that delivers the “one sweet push toward honesty” feeling in miniature.

Latest and upcoming

These are the newest and next titles currently listed.

  • Room to Breathe (2026): A fractured friendship gets forced into the open when two teens are stuck together with no easy escape.
  • Stranger Things Have Happened (2026, adult romance): A pretend engagement for “couples therapy” turns into real chemistry with real consequences.
  • Light Up My Life (2026): Rival families, a Christmas decorating war, and a forbidden spark that refuses to behave.

A clean reading plan that doesn’t feel like homework

If you want a satisfying run with variety:

  1. P.S. I Like You (classic voice and pacing)
  2. Sunkissed (summer setting, bigger family dynamics)
  3. We Met Like This (modern tone)
  4. Then pick one connected series: Pivot Point or Love, Life, and the List
  5. Finish by sampling the newest releases as they land (Room to Breathe, then Light Up My Life, and try the adult title Stranger Things Have Happened if you want a tone shift)

FAQs

Do Kasie West books share one big universe?
No. Outside the two series listed above, the books are built to stand alone.

If I only read one book, which is the safest first try?
P.S. I Like You is a strong snapshot of her humor, sweetness, and slow-build tension.

Is there a “chronological timeline” order that differs from publication order?
Not meaningfully. For these stories, “chronological” is basically the same as “release order,” and standalones don’t depend on each other.

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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.