Rebel Bride
by Kate Meader
Chicago Players - Book 2
Publisher: Kate Meader LLC
Release Date: October 21, 2025
Reviewed by PJ





Summer
I can’t marry him.
I have no good reason to jilt my hockey player fiancé, except that the closer we get to the big day, the more I feel myself shrinking to a hollow shell. Two minutes after I slip into the church bathroom to calm my pre-wedding jitters, I jump out the window to make my escape …
… and land on Hatch Kershaw, my fiancé’s teammate on the Chicago Rebels.
This guy has always hated me for reasons I can’t fathom. Half the time he looks right through me, like I’m no better than the ice shavings on his skate blades. The other half? That brooding green gaze strips me bare and sees right into my soul.
Neither option is good for me, so I really shouldn’t want his help … should I?
Hatch
The bride hit me like a ton of bricks.
The last thing I expected was for my teammate’s bride to ask for my help in fleeing her wedding. Make that the second last—even more unexpected is that I said “yes.” Before I know it, I’ve driven her to my family’s vacation home because I’m a nice guy and she needs to catch her breath.
Only now, I can’t breathe around her.
Summer Landry and I have never hit it off, so why the hell am I going along with this madness? Every stolen glance and accidental touch tell me she’s off-limits, while each torturous second with her in our lakeside hideaway has me questioning everything I thought I knew about who she is and what she’s hiding.
No one can know what I did—not my teammate, not my family, not the media—or all hell will break loose. Most of all, Summer can never know why I dislike her so much.
Because if she did, I might not recover.
PJ's Thoughts:
I've read Rebel Bride twice. I'll no doubt visit it again. That seems to be the norm for me and Kate Meader's books. The books in her Chicago Rebels and Rookie Rebels series all sit on my keeper shelf. But, as if the heart-tugging goodness of those books wasn't enough, here she comes with a new series featuring the children of everyone's favorite Rebel, Theo Kershaw. And, let me tell you, these Kershaw offspring do not disappoint!
I was so eager to discover the cause of the friction between Summer and Hatch that was clearly evident in Sweet Thing (Chicago Players - Book 1). Turns out there was a whole lot of sumpin' sumpin' simmering beneath the surface of the eldest Kershaw child and I couldn't be happier. Hatch and Summer together was everything I could have hoped for. First, I love a runaway bride and Meader's special touch with that whole opening chapter was *chef's kiss*. The surprise. The laughter. The tension. The getaway to the Kershaw cabin in Saugatuck. Which brings me to the second thing I loved: Forced Proximity.
It was pure pleasure to watch these two slowly lower their guards and open up to one another. Being a Meader book, it's filled with humor, sparkling dialogue, tender emotion, vulnerability, and in Hatch's case, yearning. So much yearning. Also cheese. There's a lot to be said for a good triple creme Brie. And then there's the steam. I do love me some Kate Meader steam. Of course, the initial getaway is only the beginning of the journey for these two. There's much to explore for both Hatch and Summer, both personally and professionally, before an HEA is even on the horizon. And that's where everyone else comes into play.
One of my favorite aspects of these books is the family, friends, and teammates who all are such an important part of the story. I love these characters and relationships so much. They add laughter, well-intentioned meddling, wisdom, support, love, motivation, and flat-out fun. Also conflict in some cases, but that's part of what keeps these characters real and the relationships authentic. If you enjoy big families who are bonded by unconditional love and support, laughter and fun, but also up in one another's business constantly, you're going to love the Kershaws. Just like I do. And Summer. For a woman who is without family and searching for her place in the world, the Kershaw family is an almost irresistible place to land.
Another part of this book that I especially enjoyed is the Midwest vibe. If you've never visited Chicago, Meader brings that vibe to life through her descriptions as well as her characters and if you've spent time there, those same descriptions and character banter will reinforce all the things we love about this city on the lake. And, yes, Kershaws, I agree with you. There's nothing like a good cheese board and it will always be the Sears Tower.
If you're looking for a funny, endearing, steamy, complicated contemporary romance with family, friendship, character growth, sweetness and sass, hockey brotherhood, sports-loving women, and happy endings earned through time and work, pick up a copy of Rebel Bride. I loved it!
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