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reviewed Wolfsong by T. J. Klune (Green Creek, #1)

T. J. Klune: Wolfsong (Paperback, 2018, Dreamspinner Press) 4 stars

The Bennett family has a secret: They're not just a family, they're a pack. Wolfsong …

not really epic or awesome

2 stars

This is the first shifter story I've read and I don't think I'm a fan of the tropes I saw in it.

The first one is not specific to these stories but it bugs me every time I see it: on one hand, Ox - the main character - is described as a little slow and rather average, probably so that readers can identify with him, or at least empathize with him. On the other hand, he accomplishes unheard-of feats, and the other characters keep telling him how unique and extraordinary he is.

To be clear, I'm not against wish fulfillment stories, or just stories where there's an obvious fantasy at play. For instance The Goblin Emperor reads like a fantasy for people who have been mistreated in the past and feel that, if they were given a lot of power, they would use it to treat other people with …

replied to Llaverac's status

@Llaverac What makes Ox so amazing? He reaches Joe when absolutely nobody else could, without even trying. Joe, and by extension, the Bennet Pack, might not have ever recovered without Ox. If my 10 year old with PTSD suddenly makes a huge leap in recovery just by meeting this guy, yeah, I'd think that kid was awesome. Especially if I had the senses to detect if he had fishy intentions with my kid. It would be reasonable for Ox to have told Joe to go away that first day. Most 16 year olds wouldn't have that sort of patience. My dog, when he was a pup had a fit because he wanted to meet my neighbor. He basically adopted her on the spot. We barely knew this woman and my dog decided she was someone important to him. So, the quickness in which a bunch of canine-esque people get fixated in someone seemingly for no reason, tracks for me. :)