Order your copy today!

Official release September 2026

If you’ve read Other Lovers, you’ll love No Other Lovers, the second book in the Love Sex Poetry Peace Trilogy

More honesty, more spice, more travel, more deep girl talk and finally… Lena falls in lusty, lovely healthy love.

Get ready to swoon!


About The Book

Instead of trying to find love, she’s liberating it.

After years of post-divorce healing, dating, awakening her sensuality and remembering her power, Lena is finally ready to love again… or is she? When the tall, handsome and emotionally available Sasha enters her life, Lena finds herself feeling overwhelmed, triggered and pushing love away.

In this second book of the Love Sex Poetry Peace trilogy, Lena must learn to stop self-sabotaging, and let love into her life. She’s got to bring down her walls, be vulnerable and hold herself accountable to change her bad relationship habits. Thankfully, her besties are right there with her when she needs a gentle ear, a sensational girl’s getaway, or a firm reminder to keep choosing love instead of fear.

In addition to letting love in, Lena needs to build a non-traditional relationship structure…but she honestly has no idea how to do it, so she’s figuring it out as she goes. Both her and Sasha are established, global professionals with children and their homes are a short flight away from each other. Together, they must navigate the yearning that comes through distance, their different ways of dealing with stress and conflict, and figure out how to merge their separate worlds.

She’s surrendering the fairytale idea of love she’s been shown and unearthing a new kind of love – one that doesn’t demand, dimmish or self-abandon. She’s learning to love both herself and another.

Book #2 ‘No Other Lovers’ coming to Amazon September 18th 2026!

Natalia captures the complexity of love, desire, and self-reflection with so much softness and truth.
— J
A brave exploration of what it means to love again — starting with yourself.
— D
Your ability to capture the contradictions of modern womanhood—the push and pull between desire and self-protection, between vulnerability and strength—is genuinely impressive.
— L