Below is the complete list of J.A. Jance’s Ali Reynolds books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Ali Reynolds Books
- Edge of Evil (2005)
View Book - Web of Evil (2007)
View Book - Hand of Evil (2007)
View Book - Cruel Intent (2008)
View Book - Trial by Fire (2009)
View Book - Fatal Error (2011)
View Book - Left for Dead (2012)
View Book - Deadly Stakes (2013)
View Book - Moving Target (2014)
View Book - A Last Goodbye (2014)
View Book - Cold Betrayal (2015)
View Book - No Honor Among Thieves (2015)
View Book - Clawback (2016)
View Book - Random Acts (2016)
View Book - Man Overboard (2017)
View Book - Duel to the Death (2018)
View Book - The A List (2019)
View Book - Taking the Veil (2019)
(With Eric Van Lustbader)
View Book - Credible Threat (2020)
View Book - Unfinished Business (2021)
View Book - Collateral Damage (2023)
View Book - OverKill (2025)
View Book
About Ali Reynolds
J.A. Jance’s Ali Reynolds books mark a clear shift in her larger body of crime fiction. Where J.P. Beaumont belongs to an older police-procedural tradition and Joanna Brady is rooted in the pressures of sheriff’s work and public duty, Ali begins from a more contemporary kind of disruption. She is introduced as a former television news anchor whose professional and personal life have both been upended, and that starting point gives the series its identity. These are crime novels, but they are also books about reinvention, reputation, technology, and the strange vulnerabilities of modern public life. Jance’s official series pages present Edge of Evil as the beginning of Ali’s story and list the line through OverKill as Ali Reynolds novel number eighteen.
What makes Ali work as a lead is that she is neither a conventional detective nor a straightforward amateur sleuth. She is highly capable, socially intelligent, and increasingly connected to investigative work, but she enters the series from outside formal law enforcement. That outsider status matters. It allows Jance to build mysteries around media, online life, family entanglements, financial crime, and cyber-era threats in a way that feels distinct from her other series. The official series description for Edge of Evil emphasizes Ali returning to Sedona after the collapse of her Los Angeles life and beginning an online blog, which captures exactly how the series starts: not with a badge, but with a woman forced to rebuild herself in public and private at the same time.
Publication order matters here because Ali’s world expands steadily. The early books establish her voice, her family setting, and the way Jance uses contemporary communications, digital vulnerability, and social fallout as part of the suspense structure. Later books deepen that world and make fuller use of recurring relationships and ongoing consequences. The official list also shows several shorter crossover entries and novellas connected to the series, which reinforces that Ali’s line is not static. It grows into one of the major pillars of Jance’s bibliography, with its own history and internal momentum rather than serving as a minor side project beside Beaumont and Brady.
One of the reasons the series stands out is tone. The Ali Reynolds books feel more technologically alert and more socially current than Jance’s earlier long-running lines. That does not mean they abandon her usual strengths. They are still very much character-led suspense novels. But Ali’s background as a former broadcaster and her later involvement in a world shaped by digital risk give the series a sharper twenty-first-century edge. The threats are often tied to information, access, visibility, and manipulation rather than to traditional homicide investigation alone. That shift helps explain why Ali became one of Jance’s signature protagonists rather than just a temporary experiment. Official publisher material identifies her series alongside Beaumont, Brady, and the Walker Family as one of the main strands of Jance’s career.
Ali is also a strong fit for Jance because she allows the author to write a heroine who is fully adult, professionally seasoned, and emotionally tested without being fixed in one institutional role. She can move across personal crisis, family obligation, romantic change, business, and crime in ways that keep the books flexible. That flexibility is one of the series’ strengths. The novels are mystery-thrillers, but they are just as much about adaptation: what it means to lose one life and build another while danger keeps finding new forms. Read in order, the series shows that process clearly, and that long view is part of what makes Ali Reynolds such a durable lead.
Taken as a whole, the Ali Reynolds books are best understood as J.A. Jance’s contemporary suspense series: a long-running line built around reinvention, technology, and a heroine whose intelligence comes as much from resilience and public experience as from formal investigative training. Read in publication order, the books reveal how successfully Jance expanded her crime-fiction world into a newer register without losing the strong character foundation that defines all of her best series.