Rating: Summary: ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS IN THE WEREWOLF GENRE TO DATE!!! Review: Margaret L. Carter has written an intelligent and intriguing novel that reads very much like something out of real life, with the exception that we are given entree into the life of a woman who is a werewolf. Usually, werewolf novels tend to be overly male-centric and treat the werewolf as a mindless beast crazed with bloodlust. So, it was for me, very refreshing to read a novel about a WOMAN WEREWOLF. (The transformation sequences were well done. I could appreciate Jenny's anxiety when she woke up one morning naked not far from the remnants of an animal she had killed the previous night as a wolf. Frightened, she managed to make it home, barely escaping exposure. ) I was also fascinated with the way Jenny, through psychoanalysis, was able to tap into her "Wolf" side, overcome a number of challenges, and learn to fully embrace and accept being a werewolf. Hopefully, in future, more intelligently written and imaginative werewolf novels will come into the market. Novels that feature men and women alike as werewolves, hailing from all walks of life. May some deft writer or group of writers do for the werewolf genre what Anne Rice has already done for vampires!
Rating: Summary: The most serious, tastefully written novel I've read so far. Review: The story begins with a horrible crime. On coming home from work, Jenny finds her twin brother and half-sister viciously mutilated. The tragedy shakes her to the core, for deep within her psyche lurks the dark truth of her nature... a truth that is rapidly emerging and threatens to destroy her sanity and, most important, her humanity. Between her job as a legislative proofreader and a growingly serious and intense relationship with young lawyer Kurt, Jenny must deal with her increasing nightmares, sleepwalking, insatiable appetite, and strange loss of weight. On Kurt's insistence, Jenny decides to see a psychiatrist. Through hypnosis, Jenny is eventually able to remember what she really saw on the night her brother and half-sister were killed, and to unravel the mystery and origins of her nature. Jenny searches for answers which only her father, whom she has never met, has. Ironically, her father is the one person she must either escape from or destroy, for he only has one thing in mind: kill the man Jenny loves and keep her all to himself. Filled with slowly increasing suspense, sympathetic characters and sensuous descriptions, I found this book very hard to put down. I was able to submerge myself in Jenny's psyche, feel her pain, and understand her motivations. All throughout the story, there is a conscious care for the language and choice of words. In spite of the violent subject, the author handles the scenes with elegance and care. The ending is realistic, darkly beautiful, and deeply satisfying. The most serious, tastefully written werewolf novel I've read so far. Margaret L. Carter has a new fan in me and I certainly look forward to reading more of her work.
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