Reese Witherspoon and Harlan Coben’s thriller “Gone Before Goodbye” is now out in paperback. The book landed on June 10, 2026, published by Grand Central Publishing and timed to catch the full momentum of summer reading season.
Witherspoon shared the news on Instagram, tagging Coben and the publisher. “Gone Before Goodbye is officially available in paperback!” she wrote. “Just in time for summer reading season!”
The collaboration is a genuinely interesting one. Coben is among the most consistently read thriller writers in the world. He’s surpassed 75 million copies sold, and his novels have crossed language barriers with unusual ease. Several have been adapted for film and television, finding strong audiences well beyond English-speaking markets. His work travels well, in every sense of the phrase.
Witherspoon brings a different kind of gravity to the partnership. She built Reese’s Book Club into one of the most influential literary brands in entertainment, championing debut novelists and established voices alike. Her production company, Hello Sunshine, backed projects like “Big Little Lies” and “The Morning Show.” Both drew global audiences. Her credentials as a storyteller have nothing to do with luck.
Putting these two names on a cover carries real weight. Coben’s thriller readers arrive with high expectations. Witherspoon’s Reese’s Book Club following adds a separate and sizable audience on top of that. The overlap creates a compelling combination for Grand Central Publishing to work with.
The paperback timing is no accident. Summer reading has its own rhythm. Paperbacks travel well – lighter than hardcovers, easier to pack, less precious to leave behind somewhere. Grand Central Publishing clearly wanted “Gone Before Goodbye” to find readers who passed on the hardcover. The summer window is one of the strongest in the entire book calendar.
Witherspoon’s seasonal reading endorsements carry real influence. Her picks have moved books up the charts on more than one occasion. Calling this a summer read isn’t a casual move. Her audience pays attention, and they trust her taste. That’s a stunning amount of reach for any co-author to bring to a shared project.
Coben’s international profile makes the collaboration particularly interesting for readers outside the US. His work has built loyal audiences across Europe and beyond. Joining forces with Witherspoon connects two devoted fanbases in a way that travels across borders. That kind of credibility is hard to replicate through marketing alone.
A paperback release also opens the book up to a different kind of circulation. Paperbacks move around. They get lent, gifted, left on coffee tables and hostel shelves. Thriller readers especially tend to pass books along. That word-of-mouth momentum can carry a title well past its release month.
The summer of 2026 already has plenty of competition for beach bags. “Gone Before Goodbye” arrives with two recognizable names, a proven genre, and a publisher with the muscle to make sure it gets noticed.
The paperback edition is available now wherever books are sold.
