All this jumped at me in the first 10% of the book. Bad enough that I did not finish and returned it.
EVERY MAN in this book are portrayed as misogynist pigs- one even goes as far as grabbing the main character's butt in the workplace and getting away with it. They ALL hate the main character because she is a woman, so they all want her to fail... for no other reason than being a woman. As if that isn't enough she is also (not just a werewolf but) an outcast werewolf, living in a world where everyone is extremely prejudiced against werewolves. Every sentence uttered by the medical examiner expresses this prejudice. Why does everyone have to be a horrible person to make her look good? Because she is really unlikable.
The main character reacts to anything and everything by being a raging B (maybe that is the real reason nobody seems to like her?). This makes it hard to root for the main character. Even in a scene where the medical examiner is helping her (because she is sick) she bites his head off. Her reason: she can't afford to show weakness in this male dominated world- no, not exaggerating, that is her real explanation for snapping at someone who is nice enough to hold her hair back while she pukes. Come on, no one likes being next to Chunky MacPukes- the least you can do is say thank you.
If that is not enough to turn you away from this author then her lack of research (simple googling and corroboration of things she does not know) will most definitely make you cringe. Examples (straight quotes from the book):
"She sustained multiple fractures to both hands and a broken TIBIA on her right ARM."
A broken tibia on a left arm is quite a feat, given that there is not tibia on the arms. The tibia, aka shin-bone, is located on your lower leg.
" According to the tox screen, high dosage percodan with a diazepam chaser [...] Percodan is easy enough to come by, but diazepam is highly controlled...It's an animal tranquilizer."
Ok, everything about this is wrong. Percodan is a mixture of aspirin and oxycodone making it a Shedule II controlled substance which are the most controlled legal drugs (Schedule I are illegal drugs) and not at all "easy to come by". Diazepan (Valium) is Schedule IV, right there with Xanax, Ativan and Ambien- fairly easy to come by. Although it is used on animals (most drugs used on animals are the same as those used on humans), Diazepam is commonly used on humans to treat anxiety, muscle spasms, and seizures.
Look, I don't expect an author to be an expert on everything, but of she wants to make things seem more authentic by using "medical knowledge" she should research it, otherwise don't go for specific and keep it general and simple. I am not a doctor, nurse or science major but all this is fairly accessible knowledge. Naming body parts is a high school thing and anyone who watches Law and Order or any other crime show would have passing knowledge of drugs and their legalities. If you are writing about crime, read up on it. At this point I lost all interest in the book and author and returned it for a refund.