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The Silver Wolf by Alice Borchardt
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626147,409 (3.75)21
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Del Rey 1998-06-16 (1998), Hardcover

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The sister of Ann Rice stands up on her own two feet with this book. An enjoyable take on the werewolf myth. ( )
  AzhriaLilu | Sep 2, 2009 |
Sadly, Alice Borchardt, the sister of Anne Rice, passed away in 2007. I just finished her first book, The Silver Wolf. Most books on the market currently place werewolves in today's society, or a world much like this one with a few concessions in order to support a supernatural populace. Borchardt, however, takes us back to the Dark Ages of Rome, where poor men spend their time wallowing in brothels, and rich men spend their time reclining on chaises while gorging themselves on stuffed game birds. Poor Regeane, young, single, and with a terrible secret to hide is at her uncle's mercy, chained every night in order to keep her wolf from escaping and terrorizing the countryside. As the distant relative of Charlemagne, Regeane is worth her weight in gold, and her uncle's intent is to marry her off and exploit the wealth. But Regeane is only determined to learn how to be a wolf and a woman both, in a land where the accusation of witchcraft means certain death and torture. She has no reason to trust men, and spends her freetime plotting the death of her soon-to-be husband, who she has never met.

Borchardt spares nothing in letting you feel the dirt underneath Regeane's fingernails, letting you smell the urine and stale liquor on her cousin. Ripe with sensual and scentual images, the reader is thrust back into this time where nothing is fair, and everyone can be your enemy. Yet, Regeane finds friendship among the danger - her closest friend ends up being one of the most fascinating characters - Rome's most esteemed courtsean, the beguiling Lucilla.

Does Regeane find happiness? Is she able to sate the wolf, and yet live as a noblewoman? If you have a love of werewolves, but are looking for something different than urban fantasy, let Borchardt take you back into the days of Rome where you will run along with Regeane under the full moon and feel the thrill of freedom. And if you enjoy this one, there are two more to come. ( )
  Tisiphonie | Jul 5, 2009 |
Excellent plot, interesting characters, great subplots ( )
  Saieeda | Jun 5, 2009 |
A shape-shifting heroine faces a cruel uncle and her forced marriage in this well written story of cruelty, conspiracies, and wolves.
There were characters in this book that I hoped died by the end of it, and others who I just wanted to see left alone.
Entertaining but very dark in spots, the plot moves at a walks pace until the end and then I just couldn't put it down. ( )
  T_Wide | Nov 12, 2008 |
I have an old copy of this book that is falling apart. It tends to be my fall back supernatural romance novel when I run out of things to read and want something fast and good. It is imaginative and interesting, I read it every few months. ( )
  kate.wille | Mar 16, 2008 |
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The Silver Wolf

Book description

Amazon.com (ISBN 0345423607, Hardcover)

Regeane is a fatherless royal relation who happens to be a werewolf. Her guardian, Gundabald, and his venal son Hugo plan to recoup their fortunes by marrying Regeane to a wealthy bridegroom, even though she might inadvertently make him into a bedtime snack. Gundabald forces her into apparent compliance by threatening to reveal her secret to the Church, which would burn her at the stake. As the bridegroom, Maeniel, journeys to Rome to claim her, Regeane discovers allies in her quest to defeat Gundabald's machinations, including some very strong, funny, and levelheaded women. Unfortunately for Regeane, she also has more powerful enemies than Gundabald.

Alice Borchardt brings 8th-century Rome vividly to life. Her language is earthy and sensuously descriptive: "The wolf visited Regeane's eyes and ears. The girl staggered slightly with the shock. The light in the square became intense. Smells an overwhelming experience: wet stone, damp air, musty clothing, perspirations shading from ancient sticky filth to fresh acrid adrenal alarm."

Borchardt is Anne Rice's sister, but she writes a very different sort of tale. Ghosts, the dead, and supernatural forces are here, but so is laugh-out-loud humor and a happy ending. --Nona Vero

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:22 -0400)

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