Duck! Duck!
Avian Shifters

Duck‪!‬

    • 4.5 • 6 Ratings
    • $4.99
    • $4.99

Publisher Description

Raised among humans, Ori Jones only discovered he was an avian shifter six months ago. Unable to complete a full shift until he reaches his avian maturity, he still can’t be sure of his exact species.
But with species comes rank, and rank is everything to the avians. When a partial shift allows the elders to announce that they believe Ori to be a rather ugly little duckling, he drops straight to the bottom rung of their hierarchy.
Life isn’t easy for Ori until he comes to the attention of a high ranking hawk shifter. Then the only question is, is Ori really a duck—and what will his new master think when the truth eventually comes out?

GENRE
Romance
RELEASED
2018
August 30
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
305
Pages
PUBLISHER
Kim Dare
SELLER
Draft2Digital, LLC
SIZE
694.4
KB

Customer Reviews

Bumbleborder ,

4.5 stars.

I’m a sucker for shifter stories, but lately, I’m so bored with the usual wolf/bear/dragon shifters because they are all feeling the same old same old. Is there something different out there? Even a bunny shifter story would be a nice change of pace!

Imagine my surprise when I ran across Duck!, an avian shifter novel.

Avian shifters aren’t anything new to me… just few and far between. But compared to those I’ve already read, I was very impressed with the totality of this novel, enough to earn itself 4.5 stars from me on the first read.

Just as a warning to those who may not appreciate M/M literature, not only is it M/M but it’s also BDSM. What makes it different is that the BDSM isn’t just all about sex and domination because there is actually a storyline involved. Ori is the proverbial “ugly duckling”. He’s been in the hands of the humans’ social services, going from one foster home to another. He has no clue of his ancestry or his shifter species. He’s just months away from experiencing his first official shift which will now definitively reveal his shifter species. (He had been tested before the elders, but he was ruled as “inconclusive” as he didin’t do a total shift, and the preciding elder labeled him as a tentative “duck”.) There isn’t anything wrong in being a duck… unless you have aspirations of a higher position in life. Ducks are pretty much nearly at the bottom of the prestige pole, and since avian society is highly dependent on caste, well, that means he’ll probably be a servant, working in the kitchen or just plain housekeeping. But there’s another problem. It appears he’s been “rescued” from the human foster care system since he’s a newly discovered avian, but where to put him? Without a firm determination of his species, he really has no place to go… except a nest that is male gender only, not a species-specific breeding nest. Unfortunately, he’s now found himself as not only a housekeeping servant but a sexual servant to any and all who wishes for a quickie or to torment him (like the crows in the house).

Enter Reynard the Goshawk. As the species-specific caste system goes, he’s up there. Very few avian shifter species can demand his servitude (such as eagles). He’s in town on a more permanent basis as his uncle had recently died, and now his estate and status has been passed down to him now. (Please note that the proper term IS “passed”, not “past”! My pet peeve, folks!) When he enters the nest to pay his respects to the Council and the elders, he rescues Ori from being set upon by the crows and manages to get permission from Hamilton, the head of the nest, to allow Ori to be his servant until he comes of age.

Of course, Ori is relieved from being yet the target of the crow bullies, and now he has a chance to live away from the nest for he now resides with Reynard in the hawk’s uncle’s lodge which is sorely need of a full cleaning. The rest of the book becomes more of. a relationship story between Reynard and Ori, going from vanilla to full BDSM. But what shifter species is Ori?

Well, you know this is a rewriting of The Ugly Duckling so you must know what Ori’s avian shifting species is. But how does it affect him? What’s Reynard’s reaction? After all, caste is everything in avian shifter society. And this is only an example of this very interesting universe created by by Kim Dare, one that is truly unique to my recollection.

Ms. Dare has definitely spent a ton of time developing this new world of shifters living amongst humans yet separate from them. I just couldn’t get enough! The entire concept was quite solid in that I found little that annoyed me whilest I was reading this ducky tale. It provided the perfect environment for BDSM stories because of the caste system. I enjoyed the numerous species mentioned and which job occupations were assigned to them. I’ve never heard of a hummingbird shifter! And this particular one was from the Carribean and was the nest’s personal physician! Doves and pigeons and ducks and wrens… My oh my! What diversity! It kept me wanting to go back and reread passages just to enjoy these species of servitude and how they interacted within the nest itself. I just can’t wait to experience further dives into this universe with subsequent novels in this series!

I enjoyed the characters Reynard and Ori and how their relationship developed over time. Poor Ori! Talk about a broken, young shifter who has absolutely no idea of who he is personally as well as shifter-wise. How can anyone function in this society without these important bits of information? Especially in a society in which species is everything! He’s broken in spirit and is a target to the bullies at the nest proper who lord over him, take sexual advantage of him, who enjoy physically and emotionally abusing him. He is in such desperate need of a master to protect him. And that’s where Reynard steps in. Ori’s sad situation as well as he himself triggers protective mechanisms within Reynard. Yes, the poor young shifter needs someone to protect him while time passes until he becomes an official adult (with a definitive species ident). Reynard needs someone who knows how to keep house and be his servant. But there’s something about Ori that convinces Reynard that he is a submissive — a natural submissive — that finds his way deep beneath his skin. Is it really love? Or is it just that connection between a master and his submissive? He himself doesn’t know (or refuses to admit that it could be love). He’ll need to be convince otherwise.

Their relationship is very complicated. I appreciate the fact that Ms. Dare preferred to spend time examining it rather than just use these pages for just plain sex that escalates into BDSM. Neither is this tale a primer for BDSM.

It’s not perfect, though. This book could have used a better editor and a few more read-throughs to catch the errors. But I highly recommend it if you need something completely different to read.

Erica of SC ,

Different

Love it. It was different from other shifter book I’ve read and I’ll tell ya I loved it. Ori is the sweetest and Raynard was a perfect mate if I ever saw one.

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