The Sun Wolf
The Odin, Book I
Publisher Description
For two hundred years the Wolfe men hunted and killed werewolves until a truce between the Wolfe Hunters and the Wolf King was made. Three hundred years later the Hunters still exist, but now they police the hidden race of people, putting down only those that are rogue. Thomas Wolfe is no different from any other Wolfe man and his headquarters oversees a pack of three hundred werewolves in a town were Wolfe and wolf have become friends -that is, until the arrival of a timeless wolf. Two grisly murders have the sheriff looking for wild animals, but Thomas knows better.
Jean Rene is the oldest person in existence – and a werewolf. He is legend, said to be the first of his kind. For centuries he searched for another like him until the last sitting Wolf King demanded a dominance challenge Jean Rene had to lose, or risk becoming the next king. When a savage beating wasn’t enough, the king held and tortured Jean Rene for a month to prove he was the true and rightful Alpha. Arrogance got the king killed but three hundred years later Jean Rene has done everything he could to make sure no one knows who he really is, but there is one that remembers.
Diana Ward is a woman working in a man’s world, she plays with the big dogs and has become one hell of a…well, you know. As the operations manager of a construction company, she's use to handling rowdy men, so when an installer calls her about a problem on a jobsite she arrives at a glass-walled fortress and faces off with a seven foot tall menace who’s one word away from being punched in the throat. Luckily for Diana, Alexis Broussard is not the owner. Jean Rene is a masterpiece come to life and while she’s never been one to get all starry-eyed over a man no matter how good-looking, this one has her weak in the knees. But a man that beautiful can only mean one thing, and her life is turn upside-down in a matter of days after meeting him as he takes her to a world of sensuality beyond any she’s ever dreamed of.
Customer Reviews
The Sun wolf
Good book but too many grammatical &
Spelling errors very unprofessional
Plot
Love the strong female lead over the usual pathetic ones, but the constant spelling errors throughout the entire book were very tiresome.