Jareau Family Books in Order
Part ofKimberly Brown Books in OrderSee the Jareau Family books by Kimberly Brown in order, with quick summaries, family context, and an easy guide to reading the series.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
5 books
Where Love Blooms
by Kimberly Brown
2022
Widower Jamison Jareau is still grieving when he hires Aleviyah as a live-in nanny for his children. She brings warmth back into the house, but opening his heart again feels dangerously close to betrayal.
Deep In My Soul
by Kimberly Brown
2023
Cartel Jareau is used to protecting everyone around him, but loving Adina asks for a different kind of strength. Their story is tender, heavy, and shaped by trauma, patience, and the slow work of feeling safe again.
Nothin' Like You
by Kimberly Brown
2023
Reese Jareau knows exactly what he wants when he falls for Corelli, even if her life is still tangled up with her child's father. His patience is real. So are the obstacles standing between them.
Strip Me Bare
by Kimberly Brown
2023
Alaina returns home carrying secrets from an abusive past and finds unexpected peace with Roosevelt Monroe, a gentle single father. Their romance is soft, steady, and built on the courage to be fully seen.
The Burial of a Player
by Kimberly Brown
2023
Walker Jareau has never struggled to get women, until feelings for Jorja make his usual rules useless. Their friends-with-benefits setup turns messy fast when she wants more than he knows how to admit.
Series background & context
The Jareau Family books are some of Kimberly Brown's most inviting romances, not because the stories are easy, but because the family at the center feels so lived in. The series follows the Jareau siblings through grief, healing, friendship, parenting, and romance, with each book focusing on a different member of the family while keeping the bigger household close at hand.
It starts with Where Love Blooms, where widower Jamison Jareau is still carrying the grief of losing his wife when a new nanny, Aleviyah Sandifer, enters the house and quietly changes its rhythm. That book lays out what makes the series work: emotional honesty, strong family ties, children who matter to the plot, and love stories that ask people to move through pain rather than pretend it never happened.
Then Deep In My Soul shifts to Cartel and leans harder into protection, trauma, and patient healing. The Burial of a Player takes Walker from player status into a messier, more vulnerable kind of love. Strip Me Bare gives Alaina room to reckon with an abusive past while finding safety with Roosevelt. Nothin' Like You lets Reese bring humor, patience, and surprising maturity to a romance that has to survive bad timing and baggage.
This family is loud in the best way.
The Jareaus tease each other, pray over each other, interfere with each other, and show up fast when something goes wrong. That steady presence gives the books a comforting shape even when the subject matter gets heavy. Brown writes about widowhood, abuse, insecurity, grief, and toxic relationships, but she balances those themes with warmth, banter, and a real sense of home.
The setting matters less than the household feeling. Kitchens, living rooms, hospital rooms, porches, family gatherings, and children's everyday needs all shape these books. The romances are sexy, but they are also domestic in the best sense. Readers get to watch people build routines, earn trust, and become part of each other's lives instead of just circling each other from a distance.
If you like interconnected family romance, this is a strong place to start with Brown. Every book has its own couple and emotional problem to solve, but the larger reward is seeing the family grow around them. Partners become in-laws, kids get folded in, old hurts are named, and new jokes are born at the dinner table.
That is why the series works so well. The love stories matter, but so does the world that holds them. The Jareau Family books are about romance, yes, but also about being claimed, supported, and welcomed into something bigger than yourself.
Edited by
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