Below is the complete list of Meghan Quinn’s The Vancouver Agitators books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
The Vancouver Agitators Books in Publication Order
- Kiss and Don’t Tell (2021)
View Book - Those Three Little Words (2022)
View Book - Right Man, Right Time (2023)
View Book - He’s Not My Type (2023)
View Book
About The Vancouver Agitators
Meghan Quinn’s Vancouver Agitators books are one of the clearest examples of her modern sports-romance style: high-energy, funny, emotionally open, and built around a team world that feels socially alive rather than decorative. On Quinn’s official site, the series is presented as a set of “Steamy Hockey Romances,” and her books-by-series page also groups the line under “Hunky Hockey Players.” The currently listed core books are Kiss and Don’t Tell, Those Three Little Words, Right Man, Right Time, He’s Not My Type, and So This Is War.
What makes the series work is that the hockey setting is more than branding. The Agitators function as a built-in community, which gives Quinn plenty of room for locker-room familiarity, recurring friendships, teasing, emotional carryover, and the kind of overlap that makes each romance feel connected to a larger world. These are standalones in romantic focus, but they do not read like isolated books wearing the same jersey. The team culture matters, and that gives the series both warmth and momentum.
Kiss and Don’t Tell is a strong example of how Quinn uses that setup. Its official description drops the heroine into a remote cabin with five professional hockey players and quickly turns the story toward Pacey Lawes, the Vancouver Agitators’ star goalie. That tells you a lot about the tone of the whole series: sexy, comic, slightly chaotic, and built around forced proximity and emotional trouble arriving faster than anyone planned. Quinn is not writing solemn sports fiction here. She is writing romance that thrives on chemistry, banter, and public-athlete confidence meeting private vulnerability.
The rest of the series builds on that same broad promise while shifting the emotional center from book to book. That is one reason the Agitators books hold together so well. Quinn does not rely on one trope repeated five times. Instead, she uses the same shared hockey world to support different romantic tensions and different kinds of emotional fallout. The series identity comes from the team, the city, and the playful-but-intense atmosphere, while each book gets room to create its own shape inside that framework.
There is also a useful bit of context in how visible the Agitators have become within Quinn’s broader catalogue. Her site sells Vancouver Agitators merchandise, including team-branded apparel and even an Agitators 2025 calendar, which suggests this is not just a minor side series but one of the more fully realized fictional sports worlds in her current branding. That kind of presentation reinforces what the books already do on the page: they invite readers to treat the Agitators as a recognizable romantic universe, not just a loose shelf of hockey novels.
Beneath an already completed list, the best way to understand The Vancouver Agitators is as Meghan Quinn’s polished hockey-romance world: flirty, team-centered, emotionally satisfying, and built around a cast of players whose friendships make the whole series feel bigger than any one couple’s story. The books are linked by the Agitators themselves, by a consistent rom-com heat, and by Quinn’s talent for making athletic confidence unravel in exactly the right romantic direction.