Luke is a human dominant lycan, meaning he is unable to shift. He’s left his birth pack and tried living as a human but as he still has the lycan side it isn’t working well. He doesn’t really fit in anywhere. So now he’s attempting to be accepted into Dean’s pack. They are all strays and they don’t trust humans much but he is going to make a big effort to get them to let him make a home here. He had previously tried to fit into a pack with disastrous results (and I admit, I thought for sure something was going to come to haunt Luke now) so he’s being careful. He’s spent two years studying them to make sure it’s where he wants to be and he’s going to give it his all.
In this world, lycans are incredibly clumsy/careless (they can’t handle having regular dishes, they use camp equipment) and they consider everyone beautiful. They aren’t allowed in human schools and for some reason they don’t have their own schools, so many are illiterate. They are also hunted by humans, which is how Dean lost his entire family. The prejudice by humans against anyone deemed different rang unfortunately true. Even those who accepted lycans didn’t always accept gay. There is always something to be a bigot about.
It is a coworker, Nate, who introduces Luke to the pack leader, Dean. There is an interesting concept here of the fallacy of Alpha, Beta and Omega, but one that I’m not sure I buy. The fosterlings, what humans call omegas, eat last, have the worst housing, given the stingiest of material resources, are forced to have sex with pretty much anyone who wants them, are abused and often driven off. That is the human view. In this view, the fostered pack members do have all those things going on but there is an excuse for it, such as they aren’t fed at communal meals so unmated lycans can show off hunting skills, the bad accommodations show toughness, the gangbangs are to make the fosterling feel “more secure in the pack”, “…made a motionless receptacle of Dean’s lust…” etc. Again, can’t say I bought it. When Luke himself thinks “to belong. By whatever means necessary”, it smacked of that “less than”.
Dean is the leader and what he says goes. When he refuses to allow anyone else to screw Luke, something was odd. They don’t do that, right? Luke is immediately fearful he is being rejected from the pack, since he wasn’t offered out. Nope, it’s a mating heat triggered by Luke and Dean wants to keep him all to himself. You get to see the lycan version of romance, which was seriously adorable. They are trying so hard to make this human feel welcome. Luke is the one now who seems to be prejudiced against himself, mostly.
Let’s talk about Luke’s mom, a human mated to a lycan, who is amazing, awesome and so embarrassing for Luke. I loved her. She is unrepentant and wants to share her experience with her mortified son. Come on, he’s dealing with a lycan lover with a bone in his penis, a constant state of arousal and the need to show everyone Luke is his.
Luke has a history of past abuse, but other than that the story is pretty angst free. I found the concepts interesting, I loved the world building even as I had questions about it (how can they be so “unhuman-like” while being close to humans, for example), and I particularly loved seeing the big bad not-an-alpha winning his obtuse mate.