Steele Brothers Books in Order
Part ofEden Finley Books in OrderSee the Steele Brothers duet by Eden Finley in order, with emotional romance summaries, series background, and guidance on reading alongside related books.
Last updated: January 12, 2026
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Publication Order
2 books
Unspoken Vow
by Eden Finley
2019
Anders Steele is a master at avoidance until moving in with Brody, a big, intimidating man with a gentle centre, leaves nowhere to hide. As attraction grows, Anders is forced to face old trauma, anxiety and the terrifying idea that someone might stay.
Unwritten Law
by Eden Finley
2018
Law has spent years pretending to be his identical twin to break up with Anderss boyfriends. It always felt harmless until he meets Reed, the man who finally makes him wish he could stop lying and be seen as himself.
Series background & context
The Steele Brothers duet strips things back from the wider sports and celebrity universe to focus on a single family, a pair of identical twins with too much shared history and very different ways of coping. The books are more intimate and emotionally intense, but still carry Eden Finleys trademark humour and directness.
In Unwritten Law, Lawson has spent years cleaning up after his twin Anders, including doing his dirty work when breakups get hard. Because no one can tell them apart, Law has slipped into Anderss life more than once, and it always felt like a victimless crime until he meets Reed. What begins as another fill in job turns into something real, leaving Law trapped between the man he is falling for and the brother he has always protected.
Unspoken Vow shifts the focus to Anders himself, who is dealing with a much darker past than his easygoing exterior suggests. Moving in with Brody, a big, intimidating man who has his own scars, forces Anders to confront trauma he has been burying for years. Their story tackles anxiety, therapy and the terrifying vulnerability of letting somebody see all the parts of you you would rather keep hidden.
Together, the duet looks at identity and guilt, the ways family loyalty can twist into something unhealthy, and what it takes to build honest relationships after years of pretending. There are still jokes, awkward moments and heat, but the stakes feel smaller and more personal than in the big ensemble series.
Because the two books are tightly linked, they work best read back to back. The Steele brothers also appear around the edges of other series, so picking up their story adds depth when they show up elsewhere in the Sadenverse.
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