Paige Toon Books in Order (Updated February 27, 2026)

Paige Toon writes contemporary romance and relationship-driven fiction, often set across travel-heavy locations. The important thing to know is that most of her novels are standalones, but many share a soft “cameo universe” (characters and references popping up across books). On top of that, she has two clear series tracks: the Johnny Jefferson continuity and the Jessie Jefferson YA trilogy.

Paige Toon Books in Order (Updated February 27, 2026)

If you only want one rule that never backfires: read in publication order. If you’re pickier, use the map below.

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The continuity map (so you don’t trip over spoilers)

Strict continuity (order matters):

  • Johnny Jefferson / Meg: Johnny Be GoodBaby Be Mine (plus an e-short follow-up)
  • Jessie Jefferson (YA trilogy): Book 1 → Book 2 → Book 3
  • One Perfect: One Perfect SummerOne Perfect Christmas (short sequel)

Loose continuity (order doesn’t “spoil the plot,” but you’ll miss nods):

  • Many of the adult standalones reward long-time readers with recurring side characters and references.

Choose your starting point

Want the most “typical” early Paige Toon vibe (and a good gateway into the cameo universe)?
Start with Lucy in the Sky.

Want a compact, two-book arc with a clear beginning and end?
Start with Johnny Be Good.

Want to start with the newest era?
Start with Seven Summers (and then keep going forward), with the understanding that you’re skipping the long chain of earlier character nods.


Adult novels and related stories (Publication Order)

2000s–early 2010s: the foundation books

  1. Lucy in the Sky (2007): A long-haul flight detonates Lucy’s relationship assumptions, kicking off the emotional tone and character web that later books quietly echo.
  2. Johnny Be Good (2008): Meg becomes a rock star’s PA and walks straight into the series’ most direct romance-continuity setup.
  3. Chasing Daisy (2009): A glamorous travel-and-escape romance that expands Toon’s “people you might meet again” cast in a big way.
  4. Pictures of Lily (2010): A second-chance, past-and-present love story that leans into memory, regret, and the cost of choosing “safe.”
  5. Baby Be Mine (2011): The Johnny Jefferson arc turns serious, with consequences and secrets that only work if you’ve read Johnny Be Good first.
  6. One Perfect Summer (2012): A first-love story built around timing and long shadows, later supported by a short sequel.
  7. The Longest Holiday (2013): A marriage-in-crisis reset in a sunlit setting, where the emotional question is whether “starting over” is actually possible.
  8. Thirteen Weddings (2014): A romantic slow-burn framed through wedding work, where the repeated ceremonies keep forcing the same unresolved truth to surface.
  9. The Sun in Her Eyes (2015): A past tragedy and present longing collide, pushing Toon’s work into deeper family-history territory.
  10. The One We Fell in Love With (2016): Three sisters, one shared history, and a single romantic fault-line that tests how well anyone really knows themselves.
  11. The Last Piece of My Heart (2017): A writer steps into another author’s unfinished work, and the “missing pieces” idea becomes literal and emotional at once.
  12. Five Years From Now (2018): A long-spanning relationship story structured around time jumps, where each return meeting changes what “meant to be” even means.
  13. If You Could Go Anywhere (2019): A roots-and-identity novel where the central pull is self-discovery rather than the romance alone.
  14. The Minute I Saw You (2020): A summer connection becomes a life marker, and the story asks what happens when your heart stays behind in one moment.
  15. Someone I Used to Know (2021): A childhood-friend triangle matures into adult consequences, with nostalgia functioning as both comfort and trap.
  16. Only Love Can Hurt Like This (2023): A love story pressured by a core secret, built to test what survives when the truth arrives late.
  17. Seven Summers (2024): A seasonal, memory-rich romance that leans into “the version of you you were back then” as a living force in the present.
  18. What If I Never Get Over You (2025): A commitment-and-consequence romance that centers the long tail of a defining relationship rather than the chase itself.
  19. Don’t Fall in Love With Me (2026): A new-era romance that returns to Toon’s signature tension between history, desire, and the choices you keep trying not to make.

E-book shorts and companions (Optional, best placed with their “parent” books)

These are designed as add-ons, not mandatory steps.

One Perfect mini-arc

  • One Perfect Christmas (2012): A short sequel that checks in after One Perfect Summer, best read immediately after the novel while the emotional context is fresh.

Johnny Jefferson mini-arc

  • Johnny’s Girl (2013): A short continuation that sits after Baby Be Mine and acts like a bridge toward later cameo references.

Thirteen Weddings mini-arc

  • A Christmas Wedding (2017): A short sequel that works best after Thirteen Weddings (and feels more rewarding if you’ve also read a few earlier novels).

Short story collection

  • One Perfect Christmas and Other Stories (2018): A collection built for existing fans, gathering several shorts and mini-sequels across the adult novels; it’s most fun once you’ve read a wide slice of the backlist.

Jessie Jefferson (Young Adult Trilogy) – Read in Order

This is a separate YA track with its own momentum and payoff.

  1. The Accidental Life of Jessie Jefferson (2014): Jessie’s world pivots overnight, and the series’ core identity-and-fame conflict begins.
  2. I Knew You Were Trouble (2015): The stakes rise as Jessie’s choices echo louder, and the story tightens its focus on trust and public fallout.
  3. All About the Hype (2016): The trilogy’s wrap-up, where the “who am I without the story people tell about me?” question finally has to be answered.

Recommended reading orders (three practical options)

Option 1: Maximum continuity clarity (best for most readers)

Read everything in publication order, inserting the optional shorts right after their parent books.

Option 2: Two-book commitment first

  1. Johnny Be Good
  2. Baby Be Mine
    Then jump back to Lucy in the Sky and continue forward.

Option 3: Newest-first sampling (then backfill)

  1. Seven Summers
  2. What If I Never Get Over You
  3. Don’t Fall in Love With Me
    Then go back to Lucy in the Sky if you want the long chain of recurring references.

Latest release status

Newest book: Don’t Fall in Love With Me (April 2026).


FAQs

Are Paige Toon’s adult novels a true series?
Mostly no. Think “standalones with familiar faces,” plus one very clear two-book continuity (Johnny Be GoodBaby Be Mine).

Can I read the Jessie Jefferson books without reading the adult novels?
Yes. The Jessie trilogy is its own lane and works independently.

What’s the safest single starting book if I’m undecided?
Lucy in the Sky is the cleanest early entry point and sets you up to enjoy the later callbacks without needing any special reading plan.

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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.