A review by linda_1410
Thrown to the Wolves by Charlie Adhara

3.0

Boogie finally gets some page time! Yay! And even a heroic moment! You go, Boogie! (But seriously, why does Cooper have this cat? He does not give her nearly enough attention. 😠) I liked Eli too. He makes quite the entrance. 🤭 I think he should adopt Boogie and they should go have adventures together. 

Everything else... let's start with the "mystery" since that's less complicated. I figured that
whatever was going on, Stuart, Marcus and Daisy were all involved somehow. I did think that it was Daisy orchestrating everything behind the scenes, but she just ended up being a dupe in Marcus's schemes, and Marcus was just capitalizing on Stuart's scheming to work that into his own shenanigans.
So that was a good twist. But I'm baffled at the point of Raymond's character coming along with that one ominous line never to be seen or heard from again. Pretty convenient for the plot, there, author. And I did have to roll my eyes at the drawing room reveal scene straight out of an Agatha Christie novel, and
the entire pack literally standing by Cooper.
I wonder if this scene was highlighted in the outline as "Big Dramatic Moment!" or something. It felt rather forced and quite a bit unearned, though I suppose
they were siding more with Oliver than with Cooper, but it wasn't written in a way to give that impression. At least it wasn't a magical bandaid that made everything okay between Cooper and the family, so that was nice. Although, I have to say, though I do not agree with Marcus's methods at all, I do agree with his assessment of the situation, and I'm glad that Cooper's realized that the limited scope of the BSI is problematic at best.


As far as the pack politics, I do like how the author is handling all that stuff. It's different enough from the usual that it feels fresh, but it's still pack politics. I'm still finding myself not giving much of a crap. And I wonder if the elitist and privileged life of the Park family has finally highlighted the reason why I find this stuff so underwhelming. It's pretty much the same plotline as the domineering dad forcing his son to go into the family business and continue to grow the empire and all that nonsense. I just don't care. It's so far out of my own experiences that I can't relate to it in the slightest. 

Then there's the romance. Park doing the Incredibly Stupid Thing was finally put into perspective and ironed out fairly well and it's almost understandable. Except for one thing. Like, bro,
tell Cooper that your family doesn't know he's human. Don't let him walk into that blindly. Jeez Louise.
I'm still irked over that and I'm not convinced these guys are anywhere close to having a strong enough relationship to be
talking about moving in together, and possibly even joining the Park pack some day.
On the one hand, the author can't exactly have all these important relationship developments happen between books. On the other hand, they've been together for MONTHS and still are working this stuff out? Cooper might be a mess but at least he talks to Park. And I really have a hard time buying Cooper as
an alpha anything
when he's constantly letting things like this slide. 

Oh, and AQ? 🙄 I think my eyes rolled into the back of my head once I worked that one out. Besides which,
being incapable of feeling all the pack mojo that the wolves feel doesn't exactly make Cooper better at being a leader. It just makes him incapable of feeling all the pack mojo. Though I do like that "alpha" doesn't automatically mean who's the toughest/best fighter/most intimidating.


Oh, and one last thing: Helena going on about the women who were basically used for breeding stock to make more werewolf children without their knowledge or consent, then being accused of ignorance when said children shifted for the first time and those women naturally freaked the hell out...Um, yeah, what other reaction exactly were you expecting in this scenario? Keep people ignorant, then they're going to react with ignorance, and it really grates me that the blame is never once set on the werewolf men who did this to those women. Nope, it's all just "those evil humans trying to kill us" and not "maybe we should have been more forthcoming before the truth inevitably made itself known." Because that could have been prevented if those men had either told their partners the truth at any point in the intervening YEARS or absconded with the children before their first shift happened. Or, you know, just not sleeping with human women. It's not like the female wolves are incapable of reproducing, so this is a problem that doesn't need to exist and it's solely the fault of the wolves. 🤬🙄

So there is stuff that I like, and Adhara's writing is very easy to read, but I'm finding myself having diminishing returns with this series. I think I'll step back and give myself some time before deciding to continue or not. The fact that most of my friends seemed to have issues with some development in the last book doesn't exactly inspire me to go forward either, but we'll see.