Howling (2012)
Movie
Veteran detective Sang-gil and beat cop Eun-yeong are in charge of a case that seems to involve a...
Lost (Reflections, #10)
Book
I felt like I'd lost everything. My home, my girlfriend, my friends, they were all washed away by a...
Young Adult Paranormal Romance
Loyalties (BBS #1)
Deborah Dorchak and Wendi Kelly
Book
Regina Capalini, abandoned by her parents at age three, and the victim of a heinous crime, has been...
Adult Paranormal Romance
Thicker Than Water
Book
Outcast operative in the Supernatural Investigation & Crime Bureau (SICB) Callen Blackheath finds...
MM Paranormal Romance Urban Fantasy
David McK (3623 KP) rated The Loki Sword (Fireborn #3) in Books
Sep 18, 2022
I don't know why that is; it's just one of those things.
However, I'll still read these novels, just not be in as much of a rush to do so as with the others.
This is the third in his FireBorn series (after both The Last Berserker: An action-packed Viking adventure and The Saxon Wolf: A Viking epic of berserkers and battle) and is also, for my money, the best of those three novels. That may be because of the nature of this - a band of travellers setting out on a quest, leading to a battle and a return home, with the author himself admitting the influence of the works of JRR Tolkien on this particular entry.
Shifted Reality (Looking Glass Multiverse, #1)
Book
One moment in time was all it took… I shouldn’t be here. I’m not even sure how I got here. ...
Science Fiction Romance
ClareR (5991 KP) rated The Silver Wolf in Books
Mar 4, 2022
The Thirty Years War appeared to me to be a period where everyone was fighting everyone else in Europe. Jack’s father is caught up in all this and is killed, swiftly followed by the apparent suicide of his mother. Jack flees, knowing that he has to get away, carrying a silver medal with a wolf on it.
Jack has a habit of falling on his feet, and then getting into trouble of one kind or another - so he doesn’t stay in any one place for long. In this book, he starts off in France, then on to Amsterdam, and then Germany.
It’s an intriguing, exciting book, and really readable. The ending has ensured that I’ll most definitely look out for the second book in this trilogy.
Many thanks to The Pigeonhole and J. C. Harvey for reading along.
Glossolalia; or don't scream it on the mountain
Book
“My name is Ineluki. I come from past the mountains and ice. It took me many days to reach here....
Fantasy
Wulfgang (Bad Oak Boys #3)
Book
After years in the military, Wulfgang Marrok has had enough. He wants nothing more than to settle...
MM Paranormal Romance Mpreg
Hazel (1853 KP) rated The Wolf Road in Books
Dec 14, 2018
<i>I received this book for free through Goodreads First Reads.</i>
“Any lie can turn into the truth if you believe it long enough.” <i>The Wolf Road</i> is the debut literary thriller by British author Beth Lewis. The post-apocalyptic world is not a very safe place to be, especially for a seven year old during a fierce and dangerous storm. Lost in the woods, a young girl comes across a man who, after naming her Elka, gives her a place to stay for the next ten years of her life. During this time he teaches her how to trap animals, use hunting knives and move silently between the trees – all the vital things needed to survive in the wild. For a long time Elka views this man as a father figure, but on discovering that her beloved Daddy is a serial killer, she realizes she has been living a life of lies.
Desperate to get away from the horrifying realization, Elka runs off deep into the forest with only a hunting knife and the clothes on her back. With nowhere to go, she decides to try and find her birth parents, but although she can easily survive in the wild, she is completely unprepared for the human world. With a childlike innocence, Elka finds herself in trouble on numerous occasions, only feeling at ease once she is back in the woods living the life of wolves. However she soon realizes that she will never be safe no matter how far she travels – not until that murderer is dead himself.
Once you get used to Elka’s colourful dialect, the gripping narrative pulls us into a world with danger around every corner. Elka’s revelation at the beginning of the book seems like a small issue compared with all the trouble she finds herself in later on. The reader will sympathize with Elka as she discovers the evils of man, and admire her strength as well as the development of a conscience after meeting and making her first ever friend. But whilst Elka learns how to walk amongst humans, there is a foreboding sense of doom as evilness keeps her within its sights.
<i>The Wolf Road</i> is a great post-apocalyptic story with a strong protagonist. At times it takes on a similar theme to a western novel, with guns, gold mining, and violence; but it is essentially a thriller built up of lies that are gradually unpicked. There is no psychological element to the book, thus nothing to try and work out for yourself. You simply need to read and discover what happens. As a result this book is the kind you will either love or hate. Some people may find it disturbing or gruesome, whereas others may find it exciting and enjoy reading about the unique main character.
Personally I think <i>The Wolf Road</i> is a great, original piece of work, and it only loses stars because I found a few parts a bit too grisly. Beth Lewis writes well and it cannot have been easy to keep the dialect up for the entire novel. This is an author who definitely has promise for the future.


