Meet Me Under the Lights

Featured
81qX-pao0xL
A Romeo & Juliet-inspired small-town baseball romance where the son and daughter of two rival families must decide if their love is worth the risk.

High school junior Eliza Crowley is known as the Princess of Fairfield, a farm town in North Carolina that loves two things—tradition and baseball. Although Eliza loves “the game,” her life goal is to become a lighting designer on Broadway. Shaking off her reputation as the rich girl and focusing on her town's community theater production are what she’s set her sights on this summer, and nothing will stand in her way. That is until Reed Fulton, the grandson of a struggling Fairfield farmer, and ace pitcher of the Fulton Hawks, returns to town.

Reed dreams of putting the catastrophe of last season behind him and leading the Hawks to a championship victory against the Crowley Cardinals. But when his childhood friend turned stranger, Eliza, strolls back into his life, she makes his heart accelerate quicker than his fastball, and he’s not sure he can stay away from the girl he’s supposed to despise.

Small-town summers and baseball draw Reed and Eliza together, even though the Crowleys and the Fultons are determined to run each other out of town. When the families make a deal to settle their thirty-year-long dispute once and for all, Eliza and Reed are stuck in the middle during the most important summer of their lives.

Heartwarming, captivating, and full of emotion, Meet Me Under the Lights is a pitch-perfect romance that will have readers hooked right off the bat.

Editor review

1 review
Drawn to Each Other
(Updated: June 25, 2026)
Overall rating
 
5.0
Plot
 
5.0
Characters
 
5.0
Writing Style
 
5.0
Illustrations/Photos (if applicable)
 
N/A
“Meet Me Under the Lights” by Cassie Miller tells the story of Eliza and Reed, two teens from rival families who find themselves drawn to each other during the summer before their senior year of high school. Their lives are intertwined, as their families have been at odds for years over the town’s baseball stadium. While Eliza’s family has money, Reed’s family are in danger of losing their farm. When Eliza finds out that her dad, who owns the stadium, has made a bet with Reed’s grandfather that he’s going to turn over the stadium to him if he loses the championship baseball game, Eliza can’t believe it.

As time passes and she grows closer to Reed, despite her initial trepidation to get close to him, she learns that his family has much more to lose than hers, even though they both are at risk of everything being pulled out from under them if their team loses. She can’t help herself, though, as she doesn’t want to hope that Reed loses, despite wanting to keep the life she knows and loves.

The way that Eliza finds a balance between her love of the theater and how to do its lighting to her love of baseball helps Reed see that she’s more than he ever thought her to be, and it’s just the way he wants her.

The story is at times intensely satisfying with its romantic, steamy scenes, and at other times readers will find themselves tearing up, gasping, and wondering just how it might all turn out when everyone has something major to lose. When everything seems like it’s going up in flames, sometimes even literally, it might be just what everyone needs to realize what really matters.
Good Points
The story is at times intensely satisfying with its romantic, steamy scenes, and at other times readers will find themselves tearing up, gasping, and wondering just how it might all turn out when everyone has something major to lose. When everything seems like it’s going up in flames, sometimes even literally, it might be just what everyone needs to realize what really matters.
Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0

User reviews

Already have an account? or Create an account
Sigh
(Updated: June 25, 2026)
I was enjoying this book, but I had only gotten 5% in when the author made a Harry Potter reference. It’s 2025 and this book is going to be published in 2026, so there are no excuses for including references to a book that is written by an author who is actively harming the trans community. As a nonbinary person, it completely takes me out of the story when someone references Harry Potter. I immediately stop enjoying a book as much when a reference to this IP is made and cannot keep reading this book knowing that this author included a reference to it. There are no excuses for being ignorant to the harm JKR is causing and authors can absolutely substitute these references for other things without changing the content of the story. Do better.
Comments (0) | Was this review helpful? 0 0