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The word “rogue” is generally used to describe wolves that either broke away from their pack or were kicked out, and are now roaming around causing trouble. They are considered pests and, at times, extremely dangerous. Rogues usually are loners, occasionally grouping with other rogues in order to cause even more mayhem.

However, Sally’s family is forced into becoming rogues. After being kicked out of pack after pack for having a daughter born human, Sally’s sister Peyton, the Phillips family accepts their status as rogues and tries to live as peacefully as possible, as far away from other werewolves as possible.

When their car breaks down within a werewolf territory, all that flies out the window.

Kaegan, the Alpha claims Sally as his mate, shocking Sally and her entire family. After having so many bad experiences with Alphas, Sally is fearful of Kaegan. She’s not the only one with reservations, though. Her father is not happy about this development and is suspicious of Kaegan.
Will Sally and her family be able to accept Kaegan’s help when a new pack threatens their safety?

~*~*~

“Rogues” is a novella (43,000 words). It is part of a series, but no other books need to be read in order to understand the events in “Rogues.” Other books in the “Wolves Among Us” series include “Broken,” a novelette, “The Chase,” a short story, and more are coming soon. At this time, the “Wolves Among Us” books can be read in any order.

122 pages, Kindle Edition

First published July 12, 2013

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25 people want to read

About the author

A.M. Reed

13 books21 followers
A. M. Reed started writing at a young age. She had millions of stories in her head and very few made it to paper, but when Ms. Reed was sixteen she sat down, began writing, and has not stopped since.

Now she has currently have three paranormal book series, "Ways of the Pack," "Mating of the Beasts," and "Wolves Among Us." You can expect a variety of books from this author, though. Ms. Reed has many novels in progress featuring a plethora of different types of characters, from elves to pirates to vampires.

"Mating of the Beasts" is a paranormal romance series that focuses on a type of shape shifter called "Beasts" that can be anything, foxes, lions, wolves, and beyond! "Mating of the Beasts" is a YA series.

"Ways of the Pack" focuses on a werewolf species, but has many other mythical creatures. It is for a younger audience than the other books and has a less deep plot and little to no romance, focusing more on the friendship aspect of the story. It is safe for most ages.

"Wolves Among Us" is a werewolf romance series, focusing on a completely different type of werewolf than "Ways of the Pack." Currently only one novelette and one short story from the series are available, but more are on the way. It is a YA series.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
76 reviews
June 12, 2020
Good read

I enjoyed this book and you will enjoy reading it to. If you like different and inclusion this is the book for you.
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378 reviews8 followers
March 9, 2021
Why is that I seem to be able to write when I am not at home lately. It seems like every time I write a review I am some where other then my home, weird. This time I am in the truck with my husband, who is driving obviously. We are on a week-long road trip with our first stop being Martinez, California so see our awesome granddaughter.

I am not sure Rogues is an accurate title for this book because Sally’s family is basically a pack unto themselves and they are not trouble makers. But then, a lot books started out with a loner stopping in some location for one reason or another and maybe the author felt her characters were more rogue or maybe the characters felt like they were rogues when they were in the authors head, who knows.

Sally’s family has a distrust of packs after what happened with their original pack which is reasonable but I think the excessive distrust of the new pack willing to take them in and accept them is more about how bitter her father is for his loss of position in a pack. I found it sad that he would sacrifice his daughter’s happiness for his own desire to avoid another pack, which had me wondering if part of his issue was that he was ashamed of himself for the expulsion from the other packs. I really liked Kaegan and his pack, I found them to be tolerant and willing to accept people at face value, even as Sally’s dad tested their patience.

The last A. M. Reed book I read felt incomplete like there was more to tell, thankfully, Rogues didn’t leave me feeling this way. In fact, it had me bummed when it ended because it was good enough that I didn’t want to put it down or stop reading even if the story did come to its conclusion.

This Review was originally posted here https://laurasbookbinge.wordpress.com...
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