I received a free copy of this through a giveaway on Story Graph, and this is my honest review.
I enjoyed this book. It's quite short, more of a novella and the first in a series concerning Terra, a female wolf who has been out of touch from her wolf side for so long that she can no longer shift. The story itself is interesting: Terra ran away from home to escape the restrictions and expectations of her dad, and her Pack, until she learns that her sister, who'd left when Terra was a child, had a son. Her dad, the Alpha of her old Pack, gives her an ultimatum: either Terra takes her place back in the Pack and produces a Heir, or, she shows her nephew how to shift so that he can take over.
The blurb was what drew me to it. I've read various versions of this 'kind' of story. A female wolf runs away/forced to leave/etc, but finds herself back in the shifter world due to circumstances. I've read quite a few of them, with some successes but many failures. The story falls flat, or the characters do. Finding a good story is difficult, and for many of them, I read them because I enjoy those kinds of worlds, even if they are terrible.
This one, I found had great potential. The characters are not only understandable in what they do/what they think, but nothing really comes out of left-field unbelievable, other than in one part. I liked Terra. She was definitely the most fleshed out, and I hope the same will happen to the other characters around her. But this is where it slightly falls flat for me. I don't think it's because it's all through the view point of Terra. I can see the personality of the Alpha love interest, the Beta and the rest of the Pack, but at the same time I feel like they aren't rounded out enough. It could be that in further books, they are, but for the moment they feel very 2-D. There's not enough interactions between them and Terra; there aren't enough signs of who they really are, in these scenes. I don't feel like I know them very well, unlike Terra.
I really hope that in the future, that this is expanded, but at the moment the entire story feels very 'light'. There's not enough happening in this story, before we get to the end. Its just little events that are happening, and not enough depth gone into these 'scenes' for me to feel depth within this story.
It's a light book. It's a quick read, and ends in a cliff hanger. It's interesting enough to pull the reader into wanting to read the next book, but I don't completely understand it. I'll try to not spoil it, but Terra and 'that character'... I don't understand their motivation. I don't know why, if that was their line of thinking, their actions didn't reflect it. A revelation is made about Terra, and yet she's passive, and that character appears to view her as that. So, then why is this character stating that she needs to embrace that side of her? Why is he even bothering?
As I said, I wish there was more. It feels like there should be more involved in this story, and that it skimmed too much between events. I won't be reading the next in this serious, but I don't regret reading the beginning. It's an interesting side to the usual female wolf in the modern world. It's written well. The relationships between Terra and everyone else, and the relationships of the characters between themselves is believable and strong. There are no spelling errors, and no inconsistencies or plot holes that I saw.
I would recommend this book for anyone wanting a good take on the genre.