Kennedy Ryan Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-03)

Kennedy Ryan writes contemporary romance that often blends big feelings with real-world stakes. Her books are easiest to navigate when you treat each series as its own lane and read that lane straight through.

Kennedy Ryan Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-03)

A lot of her series entries can technically be read as standalones, but reading in order keeps character returns meaningful and prevents “oh, they ended up together” reveals from landing early.

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A quick way to choose your starting point

  • Start with: Skyland if you want a modern, friend-group trilogy with strong emotional continuity.
  • Start with: Hoops if you want sports romance with heavier themes (especially book one).
  • Start with: All the King’s Men if you want political romance with long arcs and big turning points.
  • Start with: Grip if you want music + fame + slow-burn intensity across multiple books.
  • Start with: Hollywood Renaissance if you want entertainment-industry romance with ambitious, artistic leads.

Skyland Trilogy (read in order)

  1. Before I Let Go: Former loves collide again as co-parenting and unfinished grief force old truths back into the room.
  2. This Could Be Us: A woman rebuilding from a public collapse finds a love that asks her to believe in herself again.
  3. Can’t Get Enough: A powerhouse entrepreneur and a brilliant tech mind push each other toward a version of happiness that refuses to look “traditional.”

All the King’s Men (best in order)

  1. The Kingmaker: A driven political strategist is pulled into a high-stakes partnership that blurs the line between power and intimacy.
  2. The Rebel King: Consequences catch up as loyalty, ambition, and love demand decisions that can’t be undone.
  3. Queen Move: A childhood bond returns in adulthood, turning a long-held “what if” into a life-altering choice.
  4. All the King’s Men Bonus Epilogue (optional): A final, quieter look at where the main relationships land after the storms have passed.

Note: Queen Move is often read on its own, but it lands deeper after the first two.


Hoops (read in order)

  1. Long Shot: A love story fought for inch by inch, where safety and self-worth matter as much as the romance.
  2. Block Shot: Two people with history try again, this time facing the personal baggage they once dodged.
  3. Hoops Holiday (optional): A seasonal check-in that revisits the couples and gives the series a softer breath.
  4. Hook Shot: A complicated friendship turns romantic when a guarded heart finally stops calling it “nothing.”
  5. Hoops Shorts (optional collection): Extra scenes and side moments meant for readers who want more time with the cast.

Grip (read in order)

  1. Flow: A rising artist and a sharp-minded woman meet at the edge of fame, where chemistry arrives before trust.
  2. Grip: The relationship deepens as success intensifies the pressure and love becomes a public risk.
  3. Still: The long game of partnership plays out when careers, family, and identity all demand room.

Soul (read in order)

  1. My Soul to Keep: A magnetic connection forms while both leads carry secrets that make love feel dangerous.
  2. Down to My Soul: Commitment is tested when the truth finally surfaces and forgiveness stops being abstract.
  3. Refrain: A final emotional turn that asks whether love can survive the choices already made.

The Bennetts (read in order)

  1. When You Are Mine: Attraction sparks fast, but the real conflict is what each person refuses to admit they want.
  2. Loving You Always: A relationship strains under expectations and outside pressure that won’t politely step back.
  3. Be Mine Forever: Trust is rebuilt the hard way as past wounds threaten present happiness.
  4. Until I’m Yours: Fame, image, and vulnerability collide when love demands something real, not performative.

Hollywood Renaissance (read in order)

  1. Reel: A director and an actor chase artistic greatness while desire threatens to rewrite every boundary.
  2. Score (announced for 2026): Two creators reunite years after heartbreak to collaborate on a major project, and discover the past still has teeth.

Recommended reading orders (pick one)

If you want the cleanest “start here and keep going”

  1. Before I Let GoThis Could Be UsCan’t Get Enough
  2. Then choose Hoops or All the King’s Men

If you want to ease in with a shorter emotional commitment

  1. Queen Move
  2. If you like the voice, back up to The Kingmaker and read forward

If you want the most “series arc” payoff

  1. FlowGripStill
  2. Then try Reel (and continue with Score when it releases)

FAQs

Do I have to read Kennedy Ryan in one giant publication order?
No. The practical approach is to choose a series and read that series in order.

Which books are the most spoiler-sensitive?
Skyland and All the King’s Men, later books tend to assume you already know earlier relationship outcomes.

Are the optional books required?
No. Hoops Holiday, Hoops Shorts, and the All the King’s Men epilogue are extras, not missing plot.


Bottom line

If you want one dependable plan: start with Before I Let Go and finish the Skyland trilogy in order. After that, pick Hoops, All the King’s Men, or Grip depending on whether you want sports, politics, or music-and-fame romance next.

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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.