Full Tilt Books in Order
Part ofEmma Scott Books in OrderSee the Full Tilt books by Emma Scott in order, with summaries, duet background, and help deciding whether to start with this emotional romance.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
2 books
All In
by Emma Scott
2016
Kacey Dawson is drowning in grief when Theo Fletcher steps into the wreckage beside her. As they help each other heal, old promises, family pain, and the fear of moving forward make every hopeful step feel hard won.
Full Tilt
by Emma Scott
2016
Rock guitarist Kacey Dawson wakes up on limo driver Jonah Fletcher's couch after a career-threatening night in Vegas. What begins as rescue turns into a fierce, fragile love story shaped by art, time, and the knowledge that everything can break.
Series background & context
The Full Tilt duet is one of Emma Scott's best known series, and for good reason. It is a sweeping contemporary romance about love, art, grief, and what it means to keep living when life has already asked too much of you. These are not casual comfort reads, though they do end in a place of hope. They are built to hit hard.
The story starts with Full Tilt, which brings together Kacey Dawson and Jonah Fletcher. Kacey is a gifted rock musician living fast and drifting toward self-destruction. Jonah is quieter, steadier, and devoted to his work as an artist. Their connection forms quickly, but not cheaply. Scott uses music and glass art to show how both characters move through the world, one loud and impulsive, the other careful and luminous. It gives the romance a strong creative pulse from the very beginning.
What makes the first book stand out is how fully it commits to its emotional premise. The stakes are not there just to create angst. They shape every choice Kacey and Jonah make, and that gives the romance a rare urgency. The book asks what love looks like when time feels fragile, when healing is incomplete, and when joy and pain are arriving in the same breath.
Then All In takes the story somewhere different but deeply connected. Kacey is left trying to survive the aftermath of enormous loss while holding onto promises she is not sure she can keep. Theo Fletcher steps more fully into the picture as someone carrying his own grief, family strain, and private fears. Their relationship grows out of shared damage and slowly earned trust, which makes the second book feel less like a reset and more like the continuation it needs to be.
Bring tissues.
That is the main reason the duet works best when read as one complete story. All In is not meant to replace what came before. It is about what comes after, and that distinction matters. Scott is interested in the long shape of love here, not just the first rush of it. She writes about mourning, guilt, recovery, and the slow, uncomfortable work of believing life might still hold something good.
If you like music-centered romance, emotionally intense storytelling, and books that take grief seriously without giving up on tenderness, Full Tilt is easy to recommend. The writing leans big on feeling, but the characters keep it grounded. Under the tears and heartbreak, the duet is really about choosing life again. Read it in order, and preferably with a little time set aside, because once these books get hold of you, they tend to stay there.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
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