Hunting, and being hunted. Who is the predator and who is the prey?
When a marauding wolfpack terrorizes his town, Mike's first instinct is to take out the Alpha - a white wolf that lives in the woods behind his home in the valley. He also wonders about the billionaire who has just moved in there - a powerful recluse with eyes that flash gold when he's angry, or when he's aroused. When they meet in the bar, and Henry Tatum takes an interest in him, Mike becomes obsessed with the billionaire's mind, and his body. There's no telling what will happen when the wolf is threatened, or...
...when his mate is.
Howling for the Alpha is a short standalone hot gay romance story with plenty of primal attraction to a wolf shapeshifter.
Growing up, Wolf believed there was a ghost in his attic. To this day, he still believes that ghost creeps out of the shadows from time to time. He wishes it would say hello.
Wolf's stories explore the complicated, sensual bonds between men. There are always happy endings just as there is always a dash of otherworldly delight.
Really too short. Just a little more length could have made this a better, more believable story. Mike's attitude upon finding out Henry's shifter status and discovering the meaning of being a mate could have used more development. One thing that was truly frustrating was that the tense kept shifting from first person Mike's POV to third person Mike's POV.
It started so good, with an interesting plot, detailed descriptions and it was exiting. And then the author seems to lose interest in the story. Everthing is rushed, without background and unrealistic...
Was this suppose to be in first person or third? By the end I just wanted to throw it away, trying to figure out who was what. That was very difficult to get through.
This might have been better if it didn't flit back and forth between first and third person narration. That got really annoying and made me want to get the story over and done with. I was so disgusted I couldn't even enjoy the plot.