Below is the complete list of Meghan Quinn’s Bridesmaid for Hire books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Bridesmaid for Hire Books in Publication Order
- Bridesmaid for Hire (2024)
View Book - Bridesmaid Undercover (2024)
View Book - Bridesmaid by Chance (2025)
View Book
About Bridesmaid for Hire
Meghan Quinn’s Bridesmaid for Hire books are a connected romantic-comedy series built around weddings, performance, and the kind of emotional chaos that thrives when love and event planning collide. On Quinn’s official site, the line is listed as the Bridesmaid Series and specifically framed as “an Almond Bay Rom Com Spin-Off,” with three books: Bridesmaid for Hire, Bridesmaid Undercover, and Bridesmaid by Chance. That official framing is useful because it shows the series is not a random set of wedding romances, but a linked offshoot from an already established rom-com world.
What gives the series its identity is the business at its center. Instead of using weddings merely as a backdrop for one-off romantic mishaps, Quinn builds the books around a professional bridesmaid setup, which instantly creates room for disguise, emotional interference, high-stakes social performance, and the pressure of keeping everything polished while personal feelings are unraveling underneath. That premise fits Quinn especially well. She has always been strong at writing banter-heavy romantic comedy where people are forced into intimacy by absurdly inconvenient circumstances, and weddings are a perfect machine for that kind of story.
Bridesmaid for Hire establishes that tone clearly. Maggie Mitchell is introduced on Quinn’s official page as an event planner trying to turn a Bora Bora trip into a major career opportunity, only to find herself stuck in a fake-dating arrangement with Brody McFadden, her brother’s best friend and sworn enemy. That setup tells you almost everything about how the series works at its best: professional ambition, old chemistry, forced proximity, and a destination wedding that turns emotional tension into a full-blown comic disaster zone.
The later books keep the same world but shift the emotional center rather than repeating the exact same structure. Quinn’s official page for Bridesmaid Undercover moves the focus to Everly Plum, who is heading up the Bridesmaid for Hire program at Magical Moments by Maggie, and Hardy Hopper, one of the company’s billionaire investors. That transition matters because it shows the series expanding from one couple’s wedding-adjacent mess into a broader romantic world tied together by the company itself. Weddings remain the connective tissue, but the continuing appeal lies in the growing social and professional circle around the business.
The third book, Bridesmaid by Chance, continues that same thread and confirms the series’ preference for interconnected romantic comedy over strict formula. Quinn’s official description again centers Everly and Hardy, but what stands out is the emphasis on poor timing, professional boundaries, meddling friends, and second-chance emotional risk. That is very much in line with what makes the whole series work. These books are not only about glamorous weddings or romantic fantasy. They are about what happens when work, attraction, image, and vulnerability become impossible to keep in separate boxes.
The spin-off connection to Almond Bay also matters in a quiet way. It suggests that Bridesmaid for Hire belongs to one of Quinn’s larger rom-com ecosystems, where familiar tones and adjacent characters help make each new series feel socially alive. Even without leaning heavily on crossover detail, the official labeling gives the books a built-in sense of community. They are standalones in their romantic focus, but they are not isolated from one another.
Beneath an already completed list, the best way to understand the Bridesmaid for Hire books is as Meghan Quinn in full wedding-rom-com mode: flirty, chaotic, professionally messy, and driven by people who are trying to manage beautiful events while making a complete wreck of their own emotional lives. The series is connected by the Bridesmaid for Hire business, by the wedding-industry setting, and by Quinn’s talent for turning forced proximity and bad timing into stories that feel light on their feet but still deliver genuine romantic payoff.