Disclaimer: This book was sent to me by the author in exchange for an honest opinion. All opinions are my own.
Seeing Double is the second book in the Good Ol' Boys series and brings us the story of Kenna and Levi.
Kenna is that cute, rich and popular girl that everyone wants as a friend. Kenna brightens up the lives of everyone she interacts with, though inside she feels off since she lost her sister and best friend. Since the accident that took her sister's life and spared hers, Kenna has spent her time trying to live as her sister would if she were alive. She lives surrounded by people and goes to a lot of parties, but she longs for someone who sees her for what she truly is beneath that layer of hers.
Levi is a college Clark Kent who comes from an oppressive family where silence is his safety net. Levi, the son of farmers, studied hard to get where he is and earns his living tutoring other students.
When Kenna hires him to be her tutor under dream payment terms, Levi (aka Mr. Taylor) accepts, at first not knowing who she is and, in the course of their conversations, they get to know each other better (something Levi hasn't done before due to his shyness) and Levi finds out who his new student is.
So, while Levi knows exactly who his student is, Kenna remains in the dark thinking that Mr. Taylor and Levi are completely different people.
So, throughout Seeing Double we follow a popular girl/nerd boy slowburn romance that represents the typical "I have a crush, but I think she/he doesn't like me that way".
I really loved Kenna, she's one of those characters that makes us want to be friends with her! Levi, despite being able to understand all his traumatic past, I found him, at times, a little possessive, which, after everything, made me not love this character.
I haven't read the first book in the series, and although it can be read as a standalone, I recommend reading the first book for a better experience (not least because Hailey and Adam's story in seems to have triggered a whole change in this group of farmboys and made them aspire to find a love like that), given that the beginning of Seeing Double follows on from past events in Falling For Temptation (Good Ol' Boys #1) and, in my opinion, that must have been why the beginning felt a bit rushed to me (as if those moments had already had a focus, even if in the background, in the first book).
After that, the book is composed of a very good slow burn and it takes a few turns that really surprised me and hooked me to the book. In fact, I really wasn't AT ALL expecting the way it ended!
This book is for you if: you like college romance, slow burn, popular girl/nerd boy, one bed trope.