Below is the complete list of J.A. Jance’s J.P. Beaumont books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
J.P. Beaumont Series
- Until Proven Guilty (1985)
View Book - Injustice For All (1986)
View Book - Trial by Fury (1986)
View Book - Taking the Fifth (1987)
View Book - Improbable Cause (1988)
View Book - A More Perfect Union (1988)
View Book - Dismissed with Prejudice (1989)
View Book - Minor in Possession (1990)
View Book - Payment In Kind (1991)
View Book - Without Due Process (1992)
View Book - Failure to Appear (1993)
View Book - Lying in Wait (1994)
View Book - Name Withheld (1996)
View Book - Breach Of Duty (1999)
View Book - Birds of Prey (2001)
View Book - Partner in Crime (2002)
View Book - Long Time Gone (2005)
View Book - Justice Denied (2007)
View Book - Fire and Ice (2009)
View Book - Betrayal of Trust (2011)
View Book - Second Watch (2013)
View Book - Ring In the Dead (2013)
View Book - Stand Down (2015)
View Book - Dance of the Bones (2015)
View Book - Still Dead (2017)
View Book - Proof of Life (2017)
View Book - Sins of the Fathers (2019)
View Book - Nothing to Lose (2022)
View Book - Girls’ Night Out (2024)
View Book - Den of Iniquity (2024)
View Book - The Taken Ones (2026)
View Book
About J.P. Beaumont Series
J.A. Jance’s J.P. Beaumont books are one of the long-running pillars of modern American crime fiction, and they are best understood as the series that first established her name. Beaumont begins as a Seattle homicide detective, and that original professional identity matters because it gives the early novels their tone: urban, procedural, bruised, and closely tied to the realities of police work rather than to puzzle-box mystery alone. Over time, the series broadens with Beaumont himself, but those first books establish the core appeal. This is a character-driven crime line built around a man whose job repeatedly forces him into the overlap between violence, politics, family strain, and private compromise.
What makes Beaumont such an enduring lead is that he is never presented as a perfectly controlled detective hero. He is competent, but also fallible, weary, impulsive, and deeply human in ways that make the books feel lived in rather than schematic. Jance writes him as a man who ages, changes, and carries the effects of his own history. That gives the series more continuity than many long detective lines manage. The pleasure is not only in following the cases, but in watching Beaumont move through different stages of professional and personal life while remaining recognizably himself.
Publication order matters here because the series is built on that long accumulation. The early novels establish him in active homicide work, while the later books reflect both the passing of time and the widening of Jance’s fictional world. Beaumont does not remain frozen in one career moment simply because the series continues. That is one of the reasons the books reward sequential reading. His attitudes, relationships, and role in the world develop across decades, and the full effect is strongest when that progression is allowed to unfold naturally.
The Seattle setting is also central to the series identity. Beaumont belongs to a very specific urban landscape, and the books draw real force from that connection. Jance uses the city not just as backdrop, but as part of the moral climate of the novels. These are stories about institutional pressure, public danger, and private grief in a place that feels fully inhabited. Even when the plots widen, the Beaumont books keep that grounded sense of city life and city consequence.
Another important feature of the series is that it eventually becomes part of a broader J.A. Jance network. Beaumont is one of her signature recurring leads, alongside Joanna Brady and Ali Reynolds, and that matters because the later Beaumont novels sit within a larger body of interconnected crime fiction rather than as an isolated strand. Crossovers do occur, and they are worth noting, but they work best when understood as expansions of Beaumont’s world rather than replacements for it. The core of the series remains Beaumont himself: his voice, his work, and the long arc of his life.
The scale of the series is also part of its appeal. This is not a short, sharply bounded detective run. It is a decades-spanning body of work, beginning with Until Proven Guilty in the 1980s and continuing into recent years. That longevity gives Jance room to do something richer than repeat a formula. The books keep their crime-fiction engine, but they also become a portrait of one man’s endurance across time, profession, and personal upheaval.
Taken as a whole, the J.P. Beaumont series is best understood as the foundational J.A. Jance crime sequence: a long-running Seattle detective series that starts in police procedural territory and grows into a broader character saga without losing its crime-fiction backbone. Read in publication order, it offers not just a sequence of investigations, but the full shape of Beaumont’s life as Jance has built it across decades.