Elliot has hidden her identity from the world for most of her life. In the beginning; it was her grandmother's way to keep her safe. But with a new name and a thriving freelance photography career, it just made things simpler to remain who she had become.
Patricia is the potential heir to the family fortune. All she’s ever craved for is to restore old, majestic buildings to their former glory, perhaps, design the next innovating cloud-piercing skyscraper, but more importantly, she wants to choose how she lives her life and who she is to love.
Patricia’s in route to a family function, one that seems to be plagued with her controlling father’s never-ending pressure to find the perfect marriage suitor.
Unsuspectingly this time, he surprises her with a marriage arrangement that has her scrambling for a way out. With only one destination in mind, she escapes on a trip to meet the woman who had captivated her the day before, all while keeping a secret of her own.
Can they find love at the end of it all? Or are the secrets they keep too much to overcome?
Kayden was born and raised in Hawaii but currently resides in the US mainland. She started writing as a way of distraction on a popular online forum and enjoys reading everything and anything that is lesbian fiction.
After finally being convinced to publish, More Then What We See makes its debut, thanks go to Kira Plotts for editing, and C.P. Watson for editing, formatting, and publishing. If you enjoyed this book, look out for her next release, it's coming soon!
I think this book was well written. Elliot's beautiful heart is the main attraction of this story, and the love she ends up sharing for not one, but three women is amazing. Love comes in all forms, and this book depicts just that.
Thrown in a megalomanic homophobic mysogistic father two pair of women who love each other at first sight and you have the plot. There are plenty of twists and turns that keep you reading to see what's next. I prefer romances with more not less savoury characters but this works. Spoiler there is an HEA and a few people wind up in jail...
This was a surprisingly good book. Full of well written dialect, good plot, great strong characters and a good ending. I couldn’t put it down, would highly recommend