Frostbitten (Women of the Otherworld, #10)
The Arctic region grows colder and more eerie when you're attempting to track down rogue werewolves who abandon half-eaten human prey. Fortunately, reader favorites Elena Michaels (Broken; Stolen) and Clayton Danvers are on the case, keeping adrenaline high and libidos percolating. A werewolf...
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The Arctic region grows colder and more eerie when you're attempting to track down rogue werewolves who abandon half-eaten human prey. Fortunately, reader favorites Elena Michaels (Broken; Stolen) and Clayton Danvers are on the case, keeping adrenaline high and libidos percolating. A werewolf pack worth following; now in mass-market paperback.
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Format: ebook
ISBN:
9780553907049 (0553907042)
ASIN: B002MUAFX8
Publish date: September 29th 2009
Publisher: Bantam
Pages no: 384
Edition language: English
Series: Women of the Otherworld (#10)
Frostbitten is narrated by fan-favourite main character Elena, the only female werewolf in the Women of the Otherworld world. Sadly, except for the first Elena-book Bitten, I haven't been very impressed by the Elena books.Elena and Clay travel to Alaska to look into the disappearances of several wom...
Elena Michaels, the world’s only female vampire finds herself in the frozen tundra of Alaska along with her mate Clayton, tracking a werewolf on the run. When they arrive in Alaska, they find a group of rogue, thug werewolves who are into gun trafficking and murdering young women. In addition, there...
I love Armstrong's Women of the Otherworld series. The novels in the series usually are first person told by a female supernatural--but different ones generally in each book: witch, half-demon, necromancer, angel--and in this case, as in the first two books, Bitten and Stolen as well as Broken, it's...
Loved it! But if this really, truly is their last book I'm a little disappointed Kelley didn't add a final Elena and Clay scene...
I was really happy to be back with Elena & Clay again. But I didn't love that Elena spent so much time fighting off or being terrorized by a rapist. For me, it's just overused so much as a plot device in fantasy and UF, I'm just tired of it. Outside of that I enjoyed by time with the werewolves o...