Below is the complete list of Meghan Quinn’s The Bromance Club books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
The Bromance Club Books in Publication Order
- The Secret to Dating Your Best Friend’s Sister (2018)
View Book - Diary of a Bad Boy (2019)
View Book - Boss Man Bridegroom (2020)
View Book
About The Bromance Club
Meghan Quinn’s The Bromance Club books are a short, connected rom-com series built around wealthy, charismatic men, close male friendships, and the kind of romantic chaos Quinn handles especially well. On her official site, the series is labeled as “Romantic Comedies with Millionaire Alpha Heroes,” and the core line consists of The Secret to Dating Your Best Friend’s Sister, Diary of a Bad Boy, and Boss Man Bridegroom.
What gives the series its identity is not a single continuing couple, but a shared social world and a consistent emotional style. These books are linked by recurring friendships, overlapping lives, and a tone that mixes swagger, humor, and genuine romantic payoff. Quinn is not trying to build a sprawling family saga here. The appeal comes from watching one self-assured man after another run straight into a relationship he is not nearly as prepared for as he thinks. The millionaire angle matters, but mostly as fuel for the fantasy and the excess. The real engine is chemistry, bad judgment, and the slow collapse of male confidence under the pressure of love.
The first book, The Secret to Dating Your Best Friend’s Sister, establishes that formula perfectly. Even the title tells you what kind of romantic setup Quinn is playing with: forbidden attraction inside a familiar social circle, plenty of room for comedy, and a hero whose confidence is likely to be less useful than he assumes. Official copy leans into exactly that mood, framing the story around a supposedly foolproof plan to win over Julia Westin that quickly starts going wrong. It is a strong opening because it captures the series’ central pleasure: men who believe they can control the situation discovering that feelings do not cooperate.
Diary of a Bad Boy keeps the same world but shifts the romantic tension into a slightly different register. Quinn’s official description calls it a sassy and sweet romance about “an Irish rebel who falls in love with the wrong girl,” which fits the series well. The books are connected, but they do not feel repetitive, because Quinn changes the emotional pressure from one couple to the next. She keeps the same broader atmosphere of male friendship, heat, and comic trouble while letting each romance generate its own flavor of conflict.
By the time Boss Man Bridegroom arrives, the series has settled fully into its own strengths. The official description points to a fake-marriage or impulsive-marriage setup involving a boss and assistant, which widens the series beyond friends-and-siblings territory without losing the same rom-com energy. That variation matters. It shows Quinn using the shared tone of the series as the connective thread, rather than relying on the same trope every time.
Beneath an already completed list, the best way to understand The Bromance Club is as an early Meghan Quinn connected-romance trio with a glossy, playful style. It is not one of her biggest universes, but it already shows the qualities that later made her such a popular romance writer: fast banter, emotionally overconfident heroes, big romantic setups, and a strong sense that the fun comes from watching people lose control of the story they thought they were writing for themselves.