Reading order
| # | Title | Published | Author | Buy on Amazon |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | The James Miracle | 2004 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 2 | The Wednesday Letters | 2007 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 3 | Recovering Charles | 2008 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 4 | The Cross Gardener | 2010 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 5 | The Seventeen Second Miracle | 2010 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 6 | The Wedding Letters | 2011 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 7 | The 13th Day of Christmas | 2012 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 8 | Underground | 2016 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 9 | The Christmas Doll | 2019 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
| 10 | The Christmas Jukebox | 2020 | Jason F. Wright | N/A |
| 11 | Even the Dog Knows | 2022 | Jason F. Wright | Buy |
Jason F. Wright’s standalone novels span nearly two decades of inspirational fiction, from The James Miracle (2004) to Even the Dog Knows (2022). The books address themes common to the genre: family relationships, loss, faith, and unexpected acts of kindness, but Wright tends to ground these in specific, concrete situations rather than abstract sentiment.
The Wednesday Letters (2007), perhaps his best-known standalone, follows adult children who discover their late father wrote a letter to their mother every Wednesday throughout their marriage, revealing a secret that reframes the family’s history. Recovering Charles (2008) deals with a son searching for his father in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. The Cross Gardener (2010) and The Seventeen Second Miracle (2010) continue in similar territory, combining family drama with spiritual themes.
Later standalones like The Christmas Doll (2019), The Christmas Jukebox (2020), and Even the Dog Knows (2022) extend Wright’s run of holiday-adjacent fiction. The range of the standalones shows Wright working across different types of loss and reconciliation while maintaining the redemptive arc that defines his approach to the genre.