How to Hide in Plain Sight
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- $12.99
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- $12.99
Publisher Description
The unbreakable bonds of family and love are explored in this brilliant and tender story from the author of Guy's Girl.
On the day she arrives in Canada for her older brother's wedding, Eliot Beck hasn't seen her family in three years. Eliot adores her big, wacky, dysfunctional collection of siblings and in-laws, but there's a reason she fled to Manhattan and buried herself in her work—and she’s not ready to share it with anyone. Not when speaking it aloud could send her back into the never-ending cycle of the obsessive-compulsive disorder that consumed her for years.
Eliot thinks she's prepared to survive the four-day-long wedding extravaganza—until she sees her best friend, Manuel, waiting for her at the marina and looking as handsome as ever. He was the person who, when they met as children, felt like finding the missing half of her soul. The person she tried so hard not to fall in love with… but did anyway.
Manuel's presence at the wedding threatens to undo the walls Eliot has built around herself. The fortress that keeps her okay. If she isn't careful, by the end of this wedding, the whole castle might come crumbling down.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
After a three-year-absence, a young woman returns home and is confronted by her demons in this riveting new adult romance from Noyes (Guy's Girl). Twenty-one-year-old-Eliot Beck returns to her family's Ontario home for her brother's wedding. After living in Manhattan for three years, copywriter Eliot believes she can handle being with her large and complicated family for a week without any issues. But within 24 hours of her arrival—and her reunion with her ex-best-friend, Manuel—Eliot's reasons for leaving Ontario come rushing back to her and her OCD takes a turn for the worse. Eliot has spent years managing her "Worries," the personification of her compulsive thoughts, which she thinks of as a living creature, and hiding them from the people she loves. Flashbacks tracing her friendship with Manuel from the summer before fifth grade to the summer before college and recounting how the death of her closest sibling, Henry, has shaped her life slowly reveal why she left town in the first place. The complicated dynamics between characters, especially Eliot and Manuel, are credibly developed, and give rise to some truly poignant moments. Noyes places readers firmly inside Eliot's mind, making it easy to understand and empathize with her struggles. The result is an enlightening and gratifying contemporary. Agent Kimberley Whalen, Whalen Agency.