This is a cute M/M werewolf tale that deals with the fallout from a Grindr hookup gone very suddenly wrong. There isn’t really much romance in it, and I’m not sure I’d even call it a HFN ending, but I liked Damian a lot, thought Clay had potential, although he really isn’t at his best here due to circumstances, and mostly enjoyed the book.
However, this is a quick read that leaves an awful lot out. A lot of time gets glossed over, we never get to know either of them too deeply or well (but then neither do they), and there were a lot of things I wish had happened in scene, rather than being briefly recapped later. Like the bit where Damian tells wolf-Clay that he hates him. This has a massive impact on Clay, apparently, but Damian doesn’t even remember it because he was just grumbling in that way people do to their pets when they’ve done something annoying. It would also have been really good to have seen Clay and Blaine interact more. Plus a lot more details about why Damian is so unpopular with the pack and how Blaine was able to get away with everything he was. In fact, that whole pack is plain awful, so more details on it and how it got into that state – when the alphas themselves seem pretty decent – would definitely have been appreciated. And everything to do with mates – why Clay absolutely has to pick one, now, now, now, and if it’s such an arbitrary process, what’s the big deal about Damian having already found his?
I also found the puppy thing really creepy. Cute at first, but the more the book progressed the weirder it felt to me. I’ll admit there is a fairly unusual twist in the plot, but it only added to the creepiness and reduced any romance feelings to absolute zero.
Which is a shame, because there is plenty of potential here. I’d love to read more about Damian and definitely would like to see Clay when he’s under a lot less stress. But the tendency to miss out on important scenes and skip details is a bit of a draw back. Nevertheless, I’ll keep an eye out for more and see how things go from there.
(ARC provided by the publisher via NetGalley.)