Lindsey Kelk Books in Order (Updated February 27, 2026)

Lindsey Kelk is a British author known for romantic comedy and, more recently, fantasy.

Lindsey Kelk Books in Order (Updated February 27, 2026)

Reading order matters mainly for her ongoing series (where relationships, friendships, and “where are they now?” beats carry forward). Her standalones can be read at any time.

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Quick pick: what should you read first?

Safest first book (most readers): I Heart New York (2009)
If you want fantasy first: The Bell Witches (2024)
If you want a standalone first: The Single Girl’s To-Do List (2011) or Always the Bridesmaid (2015)


The I Heart series (Angela Clark) – publication order

This is the main continuity. Read in order to avoid relationship and life-update spoilers.

  1. I Heart New York (2009): A breakup-triggered reset in New York introduces Angela’s new life, her core friendships, and the emotional baseline the series keeps revisiting.
  2. I Heart Hollywood (2009): A glamorous detour raises the stakes around work, attention, and romance, making the “who/where next?” tension central to the arc.
  3. I Heart Paris (2010): A change of scene intensifies the push-pull between fantasy escapes and real commitments, tightening the series’ long game.
  4. I Heart Vegas (2011): A high-chaos setting forces big decisions to become unavoidable, shifting the series from flirtation to consequences.
  5. I Heart London (2012): Returning closer to “home” sharpens old ties and new priorities, turning past choices into present pressure.
  6. I Heart Christmas (2013): A holiday lens spotlights family, tradition, and future-planning, where every cosy moment comes with a continuity catch.
  7. I Heart Forever (2017): A later-life checkpoint that consolidates the series’ major arcs and asks what “forever” actually means for this cast.
  8. I Heart Hawaii (2019): A finale-feeling trip that closes the loop on long-running tensions and gives the series its most decisive end-note.

I Heart companion shorts (Optional, but best read in order)

These are bonus stories that land best once you already know the dynamics.

  • Jenny Lopez Has a Bad Week (2011): A best-friend spotlight that deepens the supporting cast and adds context without changing the main series spine.
  • Jenny Lopez Saves Christmas (2014): A seasonal side adventure that expands Jenny’s arc and rewards readers who’ve reached the series’ holiday era.
  • Jenny Lopez Is Getting Married (2021): A later short that revisits the world with “where are they now?” energy and works best after the main series is well underway.

A Girl / Tess Brookes series – publication order

This is a separate series from I Heart, with its own protagonist and continuity. Read in order.

  1. About a Girl (2013): Tess’s carefully planned life starts unravelling, setting up the career-and-love balancing act that drives the trilogy.
  2. What a Girl Wants (2014): A crossroads book that forces Tess to choose between stability and risk, widening the story’s professional and romantic fallout.
  3. A Girl’s Best Friend (2015): The trilogy’s capstone, where long-running choices come due and the personal stakes finally match the ambition.

Cinders & Sparks (middle-grade fantasy) – publication order

A children’s fantasy trilogy with a distinct tone and audience from Kelk’s adult fiction.

  1. Magic at Midnight (2019): A twisted-fairytale setup launches Cinders and Sparks into a running-for-your-life adventure with rules that keep escalating.
  2. Fairies in the Forest (2019): The journey expands into bigger magical trouble, adding new dangers and allies while keeping the pace playful.
  3. Goblins and Gold (2020): The trilogy’s payoff, where the quest’s endgame comes into view and the “can they actually pull this off?” tension peaks.

Savannah Red (fantasy) – publication order

A newer, darker fantasy continuity. Start at Book 1.

  1. The Bell Witches (2024): A grief-driven move to Savannah opens the door to family secrets, magic, and a threat that defines the series’ rules.
  2. The Witch and the Wolf (2026): The sequel widens the mythos and turns earlier revelations into active dangers; publication timing can vary by edition, but it belongs second either way.

Standalone novels – read in any order

These are designed to work without series context.

  • The Single Girl’s To-Do List (2011): A list-making fresh start turns into a romcom of reinvention, where the real challenge is choosing what “better” looks like.
  • Always the Bridesmaid (2015): A relationship-adjacent comedy about being everyone’s supporting character, until the heroine finally demands a life of her own.
  • We Were On a Break (2016): A “break” becomes a battleground of mismatched expectations, pushing a couple to decide what commitment actually means.
  • One in a Million (2018): A reputation-and-identity story where a bold challenge forces two people to confront what they value beyond appearances.
  • In Case You Missed It (2020): A coming-home reset with career and self-worth at the centre, where the past isn’t gone, it’s waiting in the inbox.
  • On a Night Like This (2021): A sweeping escapist romance built around one night changing everything, with momentum driven by proximity and temptation.
  • The Christmas Wish (2022): A festive romance shaped by family and memory, where the season’s comfort comes with emotional complications.
  • Love Me Do (2023): A sunlit romcom with a relationship reboot vibe, where distance from your old life reveals what you actually want.
  • Love Story (2024): A romance that leans into the publishing/book-world lens, where ambition and vulnerability collide in public ways.
  • Christmas Fling (2025): A holiday-set relationship experiment that starts as “just for now” and gets harder to keep pretend as feelings solidify.

Standalone follow-up (Optional)

  • The Bride-To-Be’s To-Do List (2024): A return to the Single Girl’s To-Do List world that checks in on the characters once life has moved on.

Recommended reading order (a clean, low-risk path)

If you want a guided route that avoids spoilers and shows her range:

  1. Start I Heart New York (2009) and continue through I Heart Hawaii (2019) in order.
  2. Read the Jenny Lopez shorts any time after you’re comfortably into the I Heart cast (they’re optional).
  3. Pick any standalones in whatever mood suits you.
  4. Start The Bell Witches (2024) when you’re ready for fantasy, then continue to The Witch and the Wolf (2026).

FAQs

Do the I Heart books have to be read in order?

Yes. The series is built on ongoing relationships and life changes, and later books assume you know prior outcomes.

Is A Girl connected to I Heart?

Not as a shared storyline you need to track. Treat it as its own continuity with a different lead and tone.

Are the children’s books connected to the adult books?

No. Cinders & Sparks is separate in audience and continuity.

What if I only want one Lindsey Kelk book to try?

Choose The Single Girl’s To-Do List (2011) for classic romcom style, or The Bell Witches (2024) if you want fantasy.

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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.