Below is the complete list of Elle Cosimano books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Finlay Donovan Series
- Finlay Donovan Is Killing It (2021)
View Book - Finlay Donovan Knocks ‘Em Dead (2022)
View Book - Finlay Donovan Jumps the Gun (2023)
View Book - Veronica Ruiz Breaks the Bank (2023)
View Book - Finlay Donovan Rolls the Dice (2024)
View Book - Finlay Donovan Digs Her Own Grave (2025)
View Book - Finlay Donovan Crosses the Line (2026)
View Book
Nearly Boswell Series
Seasons of the Storm Series
Standalone Novels Series
Busybodies Collection Series
- Staged (2024)
View Book - One Lucky Subscriber (2024)
(By Kellye Garrett)
View Book - The Nosy Neighbor (2024)
(By Nita Prose)
View Book - A Classic Case (2024)
(By Alicia Thompson)
View Book - Crime of Fashion (2024)
(By Emma Rosenblum)
View Book - The Reunion Dinner (2024)
(By Jesse Q. Sutanto)
View Book
About Elle Cosimano
Elle Cosimano is a writer whose bibliography makes the most sense in two clear phases: an earlier run of young adult fiction and a later, highly successful move into adult mystery. That shift is not a break so much as an expansion of what she already did well. Even in her YA work, she showed a taste for tension, secrecy, danger, and characters under emotional strain. What changed with her adult fiction was not her instinct for suspense, but the register. The books became funnier, sharper, more openly comic in pace and setup, while still relying on the same ability to keep readers moving quickly through layered complications.
Her current public identity is tied most strongly to the Finlay Donovan books, and with good reason. That series turned Cosimano into a major name in contemporary mystery by blending crime, comedy, domestic chaos, and fast-moving plot in a way that feels lighter on the surface than traditional noir, but no less carefully controlled underneath. Finlay Donovan, a struggling novelist and single mother repeatedly pulled into criminal absurdity, gives Cosimano the perfect vehicle for what she does best: balancing suspense with wit, emotional mess with momentum, and danger with an almost screwball sense of escalation. The books are mysteries, but they are also social comedies about money, parenting, friendship, romantic confusion, and the way an ordinary life can spin wildly out of control.
That adult breakthrough can make it easy to overlook how much range sits behind it. Before Finlay Donovan, Cosimano had already built a substantial YA catalog that includes Nearly Gone, Nearly Found, Holding Smoke, The Suffering Tree, and the Seasons duology. Those books show a darker, more overtly tense side of her writing. They are often more atmospheric and emotionally severe than the Finlay novels, but they reveal the same underlying strengths: strong narrative pull, high-concept premises, and a clear interest in what happens when fear, secrecy, or violence enter a young person’s world. Her bibliography is not random. The YA books and the adult mysteries are doing different things, but they belong to the same imagination.
A useful way to read Cosimano’s work is by mode. If a reader wants suspense with a darker edge and a younger cast, the YA novels are the place to start. If they want the version of Cosimano that has become most widely known, the Finlay Donovan books are the center of gravity. That series is now the clearest organizing principle of her bibliography, especially because it continues to expand and has become the work most associated with her name. It is also where her public voice feels most fully formed: clever, quick, highly readable, and very sure of its own tone.
Her style is one of the main reasons the books travel so well across categories. Cosimano writes with speed and control. She does not overburden scenes with explanation, and she understands how to keep tension alive even in comic material. In the Finlay novels especially, she is very good at building a chain-reaction plot, where one misunderstanding or bad decision opens into a much larger mess. But she also knows that chaos is only fun if the reader cares about the people inside it. That is why friendship, family pressure, motherhood, and emotional fallout matter so much in the books. The suspense works because the characters’ lives feel real enough to be damaged by it.
Seen as a whole, Elle Cosimano’s bibliography is best understood as the work of a suspense writer who found an especially distinctive form in comic crime fiction without abandoning the darker tension that shaped her earlier novels. The YA books show the foundation; the Finlay Donovan series shows the breakthrough. Together, they reveal a writer whose real strength lies in making peril readable, character-driven, and consistently entertaining.