
Until Naila by Aurora Rose Reynolds
Series: Until Him/Her #15
Genres: Contemporary Romance
Nalia never expected to move back to her hometown, especially not with her ten-year-old sister in tow. But when her biological mother is sent to prison, she finds herself stepping into the role of parent. Overwhelmed with her new reality, she turns to the one place she has always felt safe. Home with her family.
What she doesn’t expect when she moves home is him.
After getting divorced, Logan Rafe is not interested in another relationship. His world revolves around his two kids and the auto shop he built from the ground up.
But then he meets Nalia Mayson. Beautiful, brave, and completely uninterested.
Using everything at his disposal, including their kids’ friendship, as an excuse to get closer, Logan slowly breaks down her walls. And before long, what began as an unlikely friendship becomes something deeper, something only he saw coming.
But healing takes time, and Nalia will need to accept herself and her past before she can fully let herself fall in love. And the two of them, well, the two of them will need to navigate having children, a school bully, and a complex family situation if they are going to find their happily ever after.


I received this book for free from in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.
Review
After more than a decade of following the Mayson family, Until Nalia feels like both a love letter and a homecoming. From the very first boom with November and Asher to this final, beautiful story with Nalia and Logan, Aurora Rose Reynolds has given readers one of the most heartfelt, romantic, and enduring family sagas in contemporary romance. It’s been a journey of laughter, love, heartbreak, healing, and family—and this book is the perfect way to bring it all full circle.
Nalia Mayson’s story feels deeply personal and well-earned. We’ve watched this family grow and thrive, but Nalia’s journey—of finding love, peace, and the life she always deserved—hits on a more emotional level. She’s spent years putting everyone else first, carrying the weight of her past, and quietly building a life that gives her purpose. Watching her finally open her heart to love—and to Logan—was the most rewarding experience. This book isn’t just about romance; it’s about healing, belonging, and learning to let someone in even when it scares you.
Logan is everything a reader could hope for in a hero—protective, patient, loyal, and completely devoted. He understands Nalia in a way no one else has, and together, they build something beautiful. Their connection feels effortless yet powerful, filled with longing, laughter, and heartwarming family moments that showcase just how much they complete one another. Between his kids and her sister, Billie, their love story grows into something bigger—a patchwork family built on second chances and real, everyday love.
Aurora Rose Reynolds balances this emotional depth with her signature warmth and humor. The slow-burn tension between Nalia and Logan simmers until it finally explodes in the most satisfying way, reminding us exactly why readers fell in love with this family in the first place. There’s passion, there’s banter, and there’s that unmistakable “boom” moment that makes every book in this series unforgettable.
Beyond the romance, this story captures everything that makes the Mayson world so special—the sense of community, the unbreakable bonds between family members, and the idea that love always finds a way, no matter how long it takes. It’s bittersweet to see this chapter close, but it’s done with so much heart and care that it feels just right.
For longtime fans, Until Nalia is an emotional, joyful, and deeply satisfying conclusion. It celebrates not only Nalia’s love story but also the spirit of the entire Mayson family—one built on loyalty, laughter, and love that never fades. Aurora Rose Reynolds reminds us once again why her characters, her storytelling, and her “boom” moments have meant so much to readers for over a decade.



I just heard about this book before I saw it on your site. It sounds like a good book. I think it would be hard reading a second generation/third when you knew their parents’ love story.