When Cassius the wolf pup is cruelly left for dead, Frank Randall refuses to give up on him. Over the next two years, an unbreakable bond is formed, until Cassius’s protective instincts lead to conflict that threatens to expose their secret and tear their village apart.
In a world where fear and prejudice rule, everyone must grapple with a fundamental question – should we fight for what is right, even if it means defying the law?
Will Cassius ever find safety and a place he can truly call home?
+ Some of the characters were functional. + The scene between Cassius and the homeless man was very heartwarming and bittersweet. + Good themes and messages of animal conservation and protection. - Most of the characters are rather one-note and not very interesting, this includes Cassius himself. - Special shoutout to Rags, Cass' girlfriend, who is legit a non-character and is barely even in the book. She's just there to be his mate and nothing else. - Some of the characters make very illogical and counterintuitive decisions that are never properly justified by the book. - I don't like how this book portrays everyone who is against Cassius being kept as a pet as rather one-note and bad. Some of them do make valid points; raising a wolf as a pet ISN'T a good idea especially when nobody is alerted to the fact that Cassius is a wolf. But instead or presenting this as a nuanced issue the book pretty much shows Frank as being in the right and those against him as being in the wrong, despite some raising valid concerns about keeping a wild animal as a pet and the town's safety because of it.