Below is the complete list of Meghan Quinn’s Binghamton books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Binghamton Books in Publication Order
- Co-Wrecker (2017)
View Book - My Best Friend’s Ex (2017)
View Book - Twisted Twosome (2017)
View Book - The Other Brother (2017)
View Book - Tangled Twosome (2019)
View Book
About Binghamton
Meghan Quinn’s Binghamton books come from an earlier stage of her career, and they show many of the qualities that would later become central to her voice: humor, heat, strong friendship dynamics, and romance built around messy emotional entanglements rather than polished idealized setups. On Quinn’s official site, the Binghamton Series is currently presented as four books—Co-Wrecker, My Best Friend’s Ex, Tangled Twosome, and The Other Brother—and the series is explicitly described there as “New Adult Romantic Comedies” and elsewhere as full of “heart, humor, and heat” with “hot construction workers.”
That description is useful because it captures what gives the series its identity. These are not glossy billionaire romances or highly stylized sports romances. The Binghamton books are grounded in a more everyday social world, one shaped by blue-collar masculinity, young-adult uncertainty, close-knit friendships, and the kind of romantic complications that arise when desire collides with loyalty, awkward history, and very bad timing. The construction-worker angle gives the books a distinct texture inside Quinn’s catalogue. They feel earthier and more rooted than some of her later, flashier series, even while keeping the same lively, emotionally charged pace.
One of the strengths of the series is that it works as a connected friend-group world without becoming overburdened by continuity. Each novel has its own central couple and its own romantic engine, but the shared social circle matters. Quinn uses familiarity well. Characters carry over, friendships and loyalties ripple outward, and the emotional mess of one relationship often colors the atmosphere around the next. That gives the books a sense of cumulative life without turning them into one long serialized plot. It is a structure that suits romantic comedy especially well, because recurring side characters can keep the world warm, chaotic, and funny even as the focus shifts from one love story to another.
A few titles show that range clearly. Co-Wrecker opens the series with a title that already signals Quinn’s fondness for provocation, jealousy, and emotional disruption. My Best Friend’s Ex leans into one of romance’s most reliable tension points by crossing desire with friendship boundaries. Tangled Twosome, which Quinn’s site presents under that title even though some outside listings still show Twisted Twosome, adds an enemies-to-lovers dimension and is explicitly described on her official page as a small-town romantic comedy. The Other Brother then broadens the emotional feel of the series again by moving into second-chance territory. That variation helps explain why the books feel connected but not repetitive. Quinn keeps the same basic universe while changing the kind of emotional friction at the center of each romance.
The tone is also important. Binghamton belongs to Quinn’s romantic-comedy side, but it is not comedy without substance. The books are flirtatious and playful, yet they are still driven by vulnerability, bruised pride, bad decisions, and the awkward process of figuring out what love asks from people who are not as emotionally prepared as they pretend to be. That balance between humor and genuine romantic payoff is one of the reasons the series still reads as more than just an early experiment. It already shows Quinn’s instinct for chemistry, pacing, and emotionally messy connection.
Beneath an already completed list, the best way to understand the Binghamton books is as an early Meghan Quinn friend-group romance series with a blue-collar edge and a lot of personality. The books are linked by shared world, recurring bonds, and a consistent mix of heart, humor, and attraction. What makes them memorable is not an elaborate series mythology, but the way Quinn turns ordinary entanglements—friends, exes, rivalry, longing, bad ideas—into a romantic world that feels lively, funny, and emotionally alive.