A newcomer hath arrived from the faraway land of ‘New Jersey’ to our noble kingdom of Lupercalia. Hank Baker, chosen by the Moon Goddess Herself to serve as Her knight champion! Transported here across vast distances by Her blessing, Hank, alone among red blooded commoners, possesses the gift of were-shifting to battle the endless hordes of monsters, recover the lost treasures of the realm, and bed the most comely womenfolk.
What plans doeth the Goddess have in store for our hero? None can know, not even the king. Read on thou must!
Good, simple read, fun but at 8-9thgrade level...maybe?
The book was fun, simple, kind of whimsical. Fun premise but there was never any real character building or in-depth world building. Just a very simple story that's a good quick fun airport read. It obviously has graphic adult relationships but really it was written in an adolescent to Young adult reading comprehension level.
I have been on the fence when it comes to Eric Valls novels. I have read a few of his books they are well written. This came to me as suggestion from reading a ton of Jack Porter novels. This is a good one, captured me from the beginning, I’m a sucker for knights and werewolves!!!! Great read
Story line. I've been reading SYFY and fantasy since I was 8 years old and this storyline has been done before, but not very often and certainly not this well. Very fun story.
This is not a particularly nuanced book, it's a simple and indulgent Isekai. This isn't a flaw however, though it can be a bit boring at times and a little cliché, it's an easy and light read, ready-made for anyone who's recently run out of men's fantasy.
I am so excited to have another series from you. You are one of my favorite authors!!! Thank you for always making more stories!! I cnt wait for more series!!
The setting of this book is...well, somewhat unsusual. Specifically it's a fantasy world where a goddess (apparently?) blessed the nobility with lycanthropy, with the expectation that they'd use their powers to defend the peasants. So you get a very generic sort of fantasy medieval Europe vibe, except everyone is either a noble werewolf knight or a peasant. (...there's no middle class, merchants, cities, or towns, and no, there's no explanation; it's all nobles and peasants, exclusively).
Then the worlds most generic protagonist gets isekaied in in the most generic way possible and gets werewolf powers, meaning everyone decides he must be a noble, so the book follows him wandering around being generically heroic.
If you get the feeling I wasn't overwhelmed by the setting, you'd be right.
The rest of the book is...competently enough executed I guess. Some of the characters are okay (even if not the protagonist, who apparently was hiding behind the door when personalities were being handed out).