Below is the complete list of Meghan Quinn’s Brentwood Boys books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Brentwood Boys Books in Publication Order
- The Locker Room (2019)
View Book - The Dugout (2019)
View Book - The Lineup (2019)
View Book - The Trade (2020)
View Book - The Change Up (2020)
View Book - The Setup (2020)
View Book - The Strike Out (2021)
View Book - The Perfect Catch (2021)
View Book
About Brentwood Boys
Meghan Quinn’s Brentwood Boys books are a baseball-romance series built around one shared world rather than one continuous central couple. On Quinn’s official series page, the Brentwood Boys are explicitly labeled “Standalone Baseball Romances,” which is the right way to understand them. The books are linked by Brentwood baseball, overlapping friendships, and a common social universe, but each novel is designed to deliver its own romance with its own emotional dynamic.
That structure is a big part of the series’ appeal. Brentwood gives the books cohesion, but Quinn does not trap the series inside one formula. Some stories lean more toward college sports romance, while others move into the players’ professional years, which gives the series a broader life arc than a campus-only setup. That shift lets the books keep the same baseball DNA while changing the stakes from youthful attraction and identity-building to adulthood, career pressure, second chances, and the messier realities of long-term emotional growth.
A few representative titles show that range clearly. The Locker Room and The Dugout establish the early Brentwood energy: college baseball, tight male friendships, superstition, chemistry, and the heightened emotional chaos of young adulthood. Later books like The Trade and The Change Up show the series widening beyond the original campus feel, while still keeping the friendship network and baseball culture that make the books feel connected. The result is a sports-romance series that stays recognizable without becoming repetitive.
What makes Brentwood Boys work especially well is Quinn’s tone. These books are built to be funny, emotional, and very character-driven. The baseball setting matters, but it is not there only for branding. It gives the series its rhythm: locker-room bonds, team mythology, competition, travel, ambition, and the kind of male friendship culture that can be both supportive and chaotic. Quinn uses that atmosphere to create romances that feel socially alive. The couples are not isolated from the rest of the world; they are surrounded by teammates, history, and a group dynamic that keeps carrying forward from one book to the next.
Another useful piece of context is that the series has also appeared in collection form. Quinn’s site lists an omnibus under The Brentwood Boys, and retailer pages describe it as a multi-book collection rather than a separate new story. That means some readers first encounter Brentwood through bundled editions, but the heart of the series remains the individual baseball romances themselves.
Beneath an already completed list, the best way to think about Brentwood Boys is as Meghan Quinn’s baseball-romance world in full: connected, funny, emotionally heightened, and built around a cast of players whose friendships help hold the series together. The books are not about one giant ongoing plot. Their strength lies in shared atmosphere, recurring bonds, and Quinn’s ability to make each romance feel distinct while still contributing to a larger sense of Brentwood as a place, a team culture, and a whole romantic universe.