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Wynter always felt as if he didn't belong and knowing he was adopted just made matters worse. He desperately longed to know who he was and where he came from. After his adopted father Samuel died, he decided to open a bar called Indigo's. His life was just beginning to settle into a predictable routine; that is until destiny walked into his bar. Alarick, Ryker and Lupin were a part of a world unknown to the humans. They were Shifters; sworn to protect the human race. Wynter felt a deep connection with the three mysterious strangers from the moment they locked eyes. Though they had never met, Wynter knew his life would never be the same.

The world of the Shifter's is unlike any wolf book ever written. Join Wynter on an epic adventure as he learns of his true identity. Follow him as he goes from running a hometown bar in the small town of Ketchikan Alaska, to becoming the leader and Alpha of an ancient wolf society called Shifters. Sworn to protect the humans from unseen predators and from themselves, Wynter steps into the Alpha roll he was born to take like his father before him. This fast paced novel will take you on an adventure of a lifetime.

468 pages, Paperback

Published March 13, 2020

28 people are currently reading
26 people want to read

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B.D. West

7 books21 followers

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5 stars
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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for R.A. Hutchins.
Author 30 books68 followers
September 28, 2021
A beautiful story of finding your true self, of fighting for what you stand for, and of brotherhood. This book has it all, and will keep you engrossed until the end. Highly recommend.
Profile Image for J.A. Martin.
Author 24 books38 followers
July 3, 2020
Incredible Journey

Wynter grew up thinking he was alone, that he didn’t fit in, until years later Alaric’s, Lupin, and Marrok walked into his bar and changed his life. This is more than a story about werewolves. It’s about family, friendship, courage, love and sacrifice. With wonderful characters, detailed descriptions of places and action, suspense and intrigue, the author transports you into the world of Wynter, whose struggle to reconcile his new role of Alpha within himself brings about the best hope and greatest danger for his pack. I genuinely loved this book and I think you will too❤️
Profile Image for Sadie Forsythe.
Author 1 book287 followers
February 8, 2022
I wanted so badly to like this book. On paper it has so much going for it. It has a great cover. The hero is 40-years-old. It's got shifters saving the world. There's a pet dog. These are all things I like a lot and I expected to love this book. But none of it really lived up to my expectations.

While I was initially thrilled that the hero is 40 years old, that hope was dashed. 40 is young to shifters who live for hundreds of years and the book reads 100% like a YA (maybe lower NA) book.

Also, will someone tell me why authors who can construct whole new fantasy worlds still can't imagine one where women aren't simply shadows of male characters? Why recreate the patriarchy whole-sale? Other than passing bar tenders, waitresses, and a stewardess, there isn't a significant woman in this book that isn't a mother/lover (usually both) to a male character and none of them have any agency of their own. In fact, most don't even have any character at all.

Here's an example, at one point Wynter notices that one of the male wolves is paying the cardboard cutout that fills the place of his mother quite a bit of attention. So, he goes to him and tells him he can court her, but has to marry her before having sex. At no point does it ever even occur to him to speak to HER about this. Then she and the wolf walk off holding hands. She is nothing but a place filler in that scenario.

The book is also full of subtle things like this from page 319, " The women of the city were hustling to tend to all the men's needs and getting them packed for their journey." And a few pages later we get Wynter yelling at the cardboard cutout that fills the place of his wife and insisting she obey him, "Do you hear me, Amara? I am giving you a direct command that you promised to obey in our vows, remember?...Say it, Amara! Say you understand and you will obey!...[S]ay you understand me and you will obey!" (I cut out a slightly spoilerish bit there in the middle of that conversation.) But my point is the super obvious secondary position of women in the book. It would be one thing if I felt like West was exploring gender and power dynamics in any fashion, but I don't. I feel like she just didn't think past the patriarchal norm. Blerg.

And obviously, if this is the sort of book the author wants to write, they can. But as a reader, it sure isn't the sort I want to read.

And the whole plot is also just too easy. I mean someone showed up and basically said, 'You're a wizard, Harry' and suddenly Wynter is all the things he wasn't the day before. He had almost a complete personality change from a somewhat anxious man to an confident alpha, giving orders and dominating everyone. His body even changed. Then, despite the packs having had 40 years to investigate (but apparently didn't bother, despite threats of genocide), Wynter talked to one person, went to one place, and read one document and he solved the problem of how to save everyone. WTH? Really?

He then goes about giving orders, shaking up the hierarchies, etc without ever even considering the political intricacies of pack life. He knows literally nothing, but his decisions are still treated as sacrosanct and infallible (both by the characters and the author). He seems incapable of error, based on nothing but maybe manifest destiny. He was born for it. I want so much more, as a reader.

I also really wish the book had been given to a better editor. I wasn't looking for spelling, typo, or homophone sorts of mistakes and I don't remember many of them jumping out at me. What I do remember is an awful lot of really awkward sentences. Here's an example from page one: "The snow falling on his tiny cabin he had found and rebuilt by hand looked comforting with its blanket of snow coating the roof top." Do I understand what that sentence is saying? Yes. Did I still read it three times? Yes. And there were a lot of those kinds of situations that kept yanking me out of the narrative. Plus, there is quite an inconsistency in POVs. The book is 99% from Wynter's POV, but every now and again we'd get a sentence or two from someone else and it always felt jarringly out of place.

None of this was helped by the fact that most of the book is told, instead of shown. So, there was a distance between it and the reader. So I never sank deeply into the narrative. Then, I was regularly pulled out entirely. This made the book's 465 pages feel awful long (and I also just don't think it really needed to be 465 pages long).

Lastly, (and I vacillated on whether to include this last point or not), while I don't think the author purposefully wrote the book to be an allegory of whiteness (especially male whiteness), it fits too well too be ignored. Seriously, there's Wynter just living his life and then someone shows up and says, "Hey, by virtue of simply being born you, you are the most important, powerful shifter (possibly person) in the world. So, here's access to all our wealth, mystery, power, and women. We'll all stand in awe and obey you unquestioningly. Seriously, you don't even have to earn it. It's yours just for being born what you are." (What, not who, I emphasize.) Again, I don't think West did this purposefully. I think it's just a subconscious sub-narrative in a lot of American's psyche. But it feels pretty blatant here.

This feels especially true considering the villains of the story are snatched straight from Native American mythos, it's even specified as Ojibwa. Plus, when Wynter meets all the pack leaders from around the world, he is introduced to people form several countries—Canada, Italy, Sweden, Scotland, Germany, Australia, France, Russia, China, Greenland, Mexico, Brazil, Egypt, India, Norway, for example. Each country is separate. Hell, even California packs are separate from Florida and New York packs. But Africa...the whole continent, every country, is subsumed into 'Africa.' And the several pages dedicated to meeting all these pack leaders (again, all male) is basically just a list of stereotypes. The Chinese pack leader was notably short, for example. The Scotts wore kilts. The Italians were fashionistas. The Russians wore fur coats. The Indians smelled of spices and wore bindis (even though they were male).

So, despite my best intentions, I have to conclude that I dislikes Wynter of Wolves and won't be continuing the series.
Profile Image for Virginia O'Malley.
Author 10 books22 followers
August 9, 2020
Wynter of Wolves
Author: B.D West
Publisher: B.D. West
Year: 2020

This is just my type of story about family reunions, fantastic places, love, battle, and a wonderful tale into the unknown, where loneliness meets love. The scenes are so clearly described you feel you are there looking in the distance, with highly descriptive characters that you will just love.

Great thought into the character's names and though there are many characters, their unique descriptions will allow you to be able to tell them apart.

B.D West really has it all in this beautifully told story that captures your heart and captivates you from the very first chapter to the twenty-seventh chapter. You will just want to read on into the night to find out what is going to happen next?

I do not want to give the story plot away as I would like you to take my word and read the book for yourself. This book is suitable for male and female audiences. Wynter is a strong male lead character and if you are a Jason Momoa fan, this is who he reminds me of.

The story continues to delve into his past to bring him to a surprising future of wealth he had not anticipated, and you discover more about Wynter as you travel with him on his journey.

A quote I loved from this book in chapter 27 near the end, “Wake up every day with purpose and even if you feel lost today, wake up. Because today can be the purpose you were looking for all along and you don’t want to miss it.”

B.D West, is an American writer of science fiction, children’s stories, fictional stories based on local folklore. Poetry is her favourite and she is an avid fan of Edgar Allan Poe.
Profile Image for Candy Varty.
Author 20 books65 followers
July 17, 2020
Such a great story

I truly love this book. The storyline was so well written and captivating. Every detail well thought out. I love the paranormal stories. This book is perfect.
Profile Image for Anya Pavelle.
Author 6 books122 followers
August 1, 2020
I really enjoyed this book because it offers a unique twist on the human/wolf shifting trope. These shifters aren’t werewolves, more specifically. The wolves in this story are shifters, ancient protectors of the Earth. The nemesis of the shifter is the Wendigo, a creature that appeals in the folklore of some Native American/First Nation tribes. Anyhow, the story centers around Wynter, someone who doesn’t learn of his shifter heritage until he encounters some mysterious visitors. Wynter gets a crash course in the history of the shifters. I thought the story was well-paced, and I enjoyed the descriptions. A recommended read for those who like shifter fiction with a bit of a twist.
Profile Image for Shannon Royce.
4 reviews
June 22, 2020
An unexpected page turner

I wasn’t sure what I was going to discover when I purchased this book because it’s not something I would have typically chosen to read but I knew I wanted to support the author. Within the first few pages I was drawn in and couldn’t wait to see what happened next. She drew you in and kept you wanting more. It was interesting, suspenseful, heartwarming, funny, action packed and filled with the unexpected. I highly recommend this page turner!
Profile Image for Porche.
Author 96 books5 followers
July 11, 2020
I was gifted an ARC (advanced reader copy) to review.
This is a wonderfully engaging self discovery tale with a modern fantasy twist. I don't want to give anything away but I recommend you read it.
Profile Image for William Lawrence.
380 reviews
May 17, 2020
Gripping story line with well written dialogue and vivid description. There is a quest for belonging captured in this story that makes Wynter very relatable to so many readers. This book moves, so hang on tight.
Profile Image for Landy.
656 reviews23 followers
October 25, 2020
This was 3.5 stars started good, for me just dragged a bit towards the end.
Profile Image for Eric.
41 reviews3 followers
November 3, 2020
Wynter Of Wolves is a extremely well written novel about shifters and their closeness to each other. They search to find their alpha to lead them while an ancient evil searches them out to destroy them. Wynter the main character is just living day by day until they find him and he learns who he really is. It is written with such emotion that I felt the characters emotions as I read the book. Wynter struggles as would anyone with this new life that appears in his bar that day. A few times the enemy actually gave me the chills! Wynter's struggles and his rising up as a man and wolf he learns just how powerful he really is and what he is capable of. He also finds his true love along the way of what I can say is truly and epic science fiction origin story. Without giving anything away (spoilers) I must say this is a must read for any action adventure and science fiction fantasy readers out there. Just when you think you figured it out a huge surprise comes up! There is a lot to this novel. Awesome read! Highly recommend!
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews

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