Pack Protector Simon Caldwell has been assigned to evaluate the threat of a new feral Shape-shifter living in a remote area of the Rocky Mountains.
Raven has turned her back on humans because of her need to shift into a wolf. She is happy living alone and wild. Until the day a dark and sexy man appears near her cave - and she watches him turn into a wolf, just like her.
Simon isn't prepared for his instant attraction to the young and gorgeous Raven. His job is to make sure Feral Shifters don't pose a threat to the Pack - even eliminating them if he has to. But when he and Raven become hunted, their very survival will depend on whether or not he can win what this wild wolf values most.
Karen Whiddon spun fanciful tales for her younger brothers as early as the age of eleven. Growing up in the Catskill Mountains of New York, then the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, she found enough magic in the rugged peaks to keep her imagination fueled for years.
Now making her home in North Texas, she shares her life with her hero-like husband and three doting dogs. She writes paranormal tales for Harlequin Nocturne including the popular Pack series and romantic suspense stories for Harlequin Romantic Suspense.
She's also written Fae novels for Lovespell and a long time ago, she wrote five Precious Gem Romances for Kensington publishing. These she now owns again and has put them up for sale on Amazon.com among other places
I have to say that 90% of this book was great. There was lots of andventure, danger, and romance. The ending however fell short of my expectations from the whole story. Overall considering it was an ok read that I don't regret spending my time on.
After escaping a life of captivity and abuse, wolf shifter Raven has retreated to the Colorado mountains to live among a pack of wild wolves. Her life is difficult, but she is content with it. Raven thought she was the only wolf shifter in existence until she sees an unfamiliar camper in her area change into a wolf.
Simon has been chosen and trained to be a Protector, and it's the only life he knows. His job is to evaluate feral shifters to see if they can be rehabilitated. If not, he's tasked with exterminating them. Dispatched to make contact with a feral in the Colorado mountains, Simon isn't prepared for the stunning beauty he encounters. Spending time with Raven soon has him questioning everything he's been taught about ferals, but questioning his superior puts Simon's career and life on the line as well. Going on the run with Raven, Simon begins to suspect she's his mate, and he'll stop at nothing to protect her.
I'd like to say that, for once, misogyny didn't rear its ugly head in a Nocturne book, but we learn that Raven was sexually assaulted, repeatedly, while in captivity. Sigh. Can any Nocturne author write one damned book where the female lead is tough, competent, and not subjected to sexual assault? Please? At least the male lead wasn't too much of a condescending jackass.
So-so story. Not as gawd-awful as others in the line, but nothing much to redeem it, either. Three stars.
Well written, with great pacing the book only loses a point for the way the final confrontation fizzles out.
I bought Wild Wolf because I love the cover, and because I got it in a sweet 2 for 1 deal together with Secrets of the Wolf. Not having read any of Harlequin's nocturne novels before, nor anything by the author, I wasn't quite sure what to expect from it and ended up pleasantly surprised that it plays out a lot more as Urban Fantasy than as Paranormal Romance.
Wild Wolf also happens to be mostly my kind of sexy, with short, not overly detailed, sensual sex-scenes that never take away focus from the main story. Although I did feel a bit uncomfortable with the way the female lead intiated the sex with the male lead while he was still asleep. In a ways I guess this fit the characters healing journey from sexual abuse, allowing her full agency over her own sexuality. But can't help but balk some at the lack of full consent here.
This books started off really interesting. I loved the premise of the book and how independent and resourceful Raven is; she's a wolf shapeshifter that has lived among real wolves for years. She comes across a "protector" Simon whose job it is to investigate her. The first half to the book follows the main leads trying to escape from the mysterious "Society". This book gives enough background about the "Protectors" that reading the previous books is not necessary. Given how short these Nocturne books are, sometimes they lack world-building, but this did a decent job. The prose was decent, the background of the characters interesting enough, but by the end the action just starts getting rushed and just doesn't feel as interesting as the first half. My other qualm is the fact that the heroine of the novel was a victim of brutal sexual violence. This is mentioned very briefly in the book and not dealt with well, ie, it's mentioned but there's really not much insight into how the character dealt with it and seems to have little impact on the development of the hero/heroine relationship.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
I really like Whiddon's pack and have been a fan of these short 'shifter reads from way back. I enjoyed Wild Wolf, but there was a great deal going on in this one and really thought that Whiddon had the makings for a full length novel here. Still I liked the pairing of the by-the-book Simon who learns to appreciate shades of gray after living a black and white life and also the wild Raven who ends up asking insightful questions since she's the outsider looking in at Simon's world.
Raven is a shapeshifter who think she is the only one who can change into a wolf. Then she sees a man change into a wolf and realises that there are others like her. But Simon has been sent to assess the threat that she poses to the general shapeshifter population. His orders are to kill her but he finds that she is not the feral animal everyone thinks.