Meg Cabot Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-08)

Affiliate Disclosure & Image Credits

As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases. This article may contain affiliate links. If you click one of these links, I may earn a small commission at no additional cost to you.

Book cover images in this article are provided courtesy of Open Library.

Meg Cabot writes across several distinct “story worlds,” from YA diaries and paranormal romance to adult rom-coms and cozy-leaning mysteries. Most of her books are not part of one giant continuity, so reading order is mainly about staying inside the right series once you’ve started it.

Meg Cabot Books in Order (Updated 2026-02-08)

This guide is arranged like a bookshelf: pick the section you care about, then read straight down.


The big signposts

If you want one starting point that represents her best-known work: begin with The Princess Diaries.
If you want paranormal romance with a finished arc: begin with The Mediator.
If you want adult romance (modern Cabot): begin with Little Bridge Island.


The Princess Diaries series (read in order)

These are the core novels about Mia Thermopolis. Later entries casually assume you know earlier outcomes.

  1. The Princess Diaries: A regular teen’s life detonates when she learns she’s royalty and can’t opt out of the spotlight.
  2. Princess in the Spotlight: Public scrutiny turns everyday mistakes into headlines, and Mia realizes privacy is a luxury.
  3. Princess in Love: First love arrives with mixed signals, big feelings, and the kind of embarrassment that lingers.
  4. Princess in Waiting: Duty expands, gossip multiplies, and Mia learns that “royal patience” is a myth.
  5. Project Princess: A forced makeover becomes a crash course in boundaries, friendship, and self-respect.
  6. Princess in Pink: Romance, rumors, and school drama collide until Mia has to choose what version of herself is real.
  7. Princess in Training: Rules, etiquette, and expectations pile up, and Mia’s temper becomes a political problem.
  8. Princess on the Brink: Pressure peaks as Mia tries to hold together school life, family life, and a public identity.
  9. Princess Mia: A bigger stage brings bigger consequences, and Mia starts thinking like a leader instead of a kid.
  10. Forever Princess: Graduation looms, relationships shift, and Mia has to decide what “happily ever after” looks like for her.
  11. Royal Wedding: Adult life arrives with commitments, chaos, and the reality that love still requires work.
  12. The Quarantine Princess Diaries: A crisis-era Genovia forces Mia to juggle leadership, family tension, and what she’s willing to tolerate.

Separate format (optional):

  • The Princess Diaries: The Graphic Novel (2026): A graphic adaptation of the original story, designed for readers who prefer illustrated storytelling.

The Mediator series (read in order)

Paranormal romance with a complete main arc, followed by later adult installments.

  1. Shadowland: A teen who sees ghosts tries to keep the peace, until one spirit refuses to stay in the past.
  2. Ninth Key: A new haunting pushes Susannah into danger that feels personal, not supernatural.
  3. Reunion: Old enemies return and force Susannah to confront what she’s been denying about love and power.
  4. Darkest Hour: A deadly escalation tests how far she’ll go to protect the living and the dead.
  5. Haunted: Consequences stack up, and helping ghosts starts costing more than she can afford.
  6. Twilight: The final YA push where the future depends on what Susannah is willing to risk.
  7. Remembrance: Years later, adult lives and unfinished business collide, and the past demands a final reckoning.

Short extras (optional):

  • Every Girl’s Dream (short story): A brief side piece that adds texture rather than essential plot.
  • The Proposal (novella): A relationship milestone story that fits best after the original run.

1-800-WHERE-R-U series (read in order)

A teen with an unwanted “finding people” ability gets pulled into danger that keeps getting closer.

  1. When Lightning Strikes: A new power turns a normal life into a target, and Jessica can’t pretend it’s fine.
  2. Code Name Cassandra: New threats force her to take her ability seriously, and stop trusting easy answers.
  3. Safe House: Protection comes with confinement, and Jessica learns safety can still feel like loss.
  4. Sanctuary: A fragile peace breaks, and the line between ally and enemy blurs.
  5. Missing You: The series closes with high stakes and the cost of being found.

Heather Wells Mysteries (read in order)

A former pop star turned dorm director keeps tripping over murders and campus chaos.

  1. Size 12 Is Not Fat: A fresh start becomes a crime scene, and Heather refuses to be underestimated.
  2. Size 14 Is Not Fat Either: Another case lands in her lap, and her “normal job” keeps becoming detective work.
  3. Big Boned: A new mystery tests Heather’s patience, her instincts, and her ability to stay out of trouble.
  4. Size 12 and Ready to Rock: Relationship progress and a new case collide, forcing Heather to grow up fast.
  5. The Bride Wore Size 12: Wedding pressure meets investigative pressure, and Heather learns you can’t plan around chaos.

Little Bridge Island series (read in order)

Adult romance set on a small Florida island, where the community overlaps book to book.

  1. Bridal Boot Camp (optional prequel): A short, scene-setting story that gives you the island vibe before the main novels.
  2. No Judgments: A storm traps people together and turns “temporary help” into a permanent shift in a woman’s life.
  3. No Offense: A broken engagement becomes a reset, and a familiar face becomes a complicated possibility.
  4. No Words: A writer’s block problem turns into a heart problem when the right person is impossible to ignore.
  5. The Last Show at the Seaside (announced for 2026): The island’s next love story arrives with community stakes and a relationship that won’t stay simple.

Witches of West Harbor series (read in order)

A cozy-leaning romantic fantasy line, built to continue.

  1. Enchanted to Meet You: A witch with a messy past faces fresh magic problems, and a man who changes the odds.
  2. The Magic We Made (announced for 2026): New trouble pushes the romance forward while the town’s magic gets louder.

Avalon High (and Coronation) (read in order)

Arthurian echoes in a modern school setting, with an expanded follow-up sequence.

  1. Avalon High: A new student realizes the past might be repeating itself, and she’s in the middle of it.
  2. The Merlin Prophecy: The next phase begins as old roles and new choices start colliding.
  3. Homecoming: Loyalty is tested when history pulls people toward outcomes they don’t fully control.
  4. Hunter’s Moon: The arc deepens with harder decisions and a sense that destiny doesn’t care about comfort.

Airhead trilogy (read in order)

A celebrity body swap setup with identity, fame, and self-worth at the center.

  1. Airhead: A teen wakes up famous and realizes the “perfect life” is a trap with good lighting.
  2. Being Nikki: Fame tightens its grip, and Nikki has to decide who gets to own her future.
  3. Runaway: The endgame forces a choice between the life she’s given and the life she wants.

Abandon trilogy (read in order)

A modern underworld romance arc with escalating mythic stakes.

  1. Abandon: A near-death moment pulls a teen into a supernatural bond she doesn’t understand.
  2. Underworld: The rules of love and death sharpen, and escape becomes harder than surrender.
  3. Awaken: The trilogy closes with consequences that can’t be negotiated away.

Insatiable duology (read in order)

Adult paranormal romance with a sharp, comic edge.

  1. Insatiable: A woman with unsettling premonitions gets drawn into a world where monsters wear charming faces.
  2. Overbite: The fallout hits, alliances shift, and the supernatural politics turn personal.

“Written as Patricia Cabot” historical romances (read in order)

These are separate from her YA worlds and can be read in any order, but publication order is tidy.

  1. Where Roses Grow Wild: A wild attraction collides with social rules that don’t bend easily.
  2. Portrait of My Heart: Romance blooms under pressure when reputation and desire tug in opposite directions.
  3. An Improper Proposal: A proposal creates complications that only honesty can untangle.
  4. A Little Scandal: A scandal threatens stability, and love becomes both risk and rescue.
  5. Lady of Skye: A sweeping historical romance shaped by place, pride, and stubborn hearts.
  6. Kiss the Bride: Wedding expectations spiral as real feelings refuse to follow the script.
  7. Educating Caroline: A spirited heroine refuses to be managed, even when love tries to rewrite her plans.

Brand-new and next-up (confirmed listings)

  • The Princess Diaries: The Graphic Novel (2026)
  • Detective Baby: The Case of the Missing Dance Team Dollars (2026)
  • The Magic We Made (Witches of West Harbor #2, 2026)
  • The Last Show at the Seaside (Little Bridge Island #4, 2026)

(Release timing can vary by edition and region, but these titles are broadly listed as upcoming.)


FAQs

Do I need to read Meg Cabot in one master publication order?
Only if you want a career-spanning project. For story clarity, it’s enough to stay in order within each series.

What’s most spoiler-sensitive?
The Princess Diaries and The Mediator, because later books reference earlier relationship outcomes.

If I only want adult romance, what should I read?
Start with No Judgments (Little Bridge Island #1) and continue forward.


Calm recommendation

If you want the most “Meg Cabot” experience, start with The Princess Diaries and read the main series straight through. When you want a genre shift, move to The Mediator for a complete paranormal arc, or Little Bridge Island for adult romance in a shared small-town setting.

+ posts

Frank is the editor of BookSeries.blog, focusing on publication order, chronological timelines, and spoiler-free reading guides for book series and fictional universes.