Touch
of the Wolf had me a bit nervous in the beginning because I wasn't sure
if what I was reading was stereotypes or realities. So I did some
research. The author is, in fact, a white woman who has a passion for
Native American history due to her love of nature. Okay then. That
caused me to lean more toward the uncomfortable end of the spectrum,
even though it sounds like she probably had done some research. I don't
know though. I just know that Jay's brother is an alcoholic and his
uncle wears feathers in his hair and communes with eagles. And there's
this overarching theme of the "uncooperative Native" since none of the
Hoh people wanted anthropologists stomping all over their land. I'm not
Native American, so I can't actually speak on any of this, but it all
seemed questionable.
What I can comment on is that Jay's
brother's alcoholism did wind up being used a plot devise. Winter's
professor who was murdered while studying the land admits to hoping to
find a Native with a weakness he could exploit. Well, that was Floyd,
who he bribed with alcohol to get information and ancient relics. That
is disgusting. It's certainly portrayed as being an awful thing to do,
but I could have done without that part entirely.
Also, Touch of
the Wolf is not the Paranormal Romance that it's marketed to me. There
was a brief moment that was reminiscent of The Mask. Winter receives the
illegal, ancient artifact, which is a wolf mask. She promptly puts it
on, and whoa. Visions and she hears a wolf cry (to the blue corn moon),
and then Jay tells her about Wolf. Wolf is totally real and a spirit in
the forest. That is not paranormal. Kissing in the forest where a spirit
wolf lives does not equal Paranormal Romance. It's just a poorly done
Contemporary Romance that attempts to use Native American culture.
Clearly,
I did not enjoy Touch of the Wolf at all. Even the big reveal at the
end irritated me. The villain spent three chapters monologuing a
non-explanation for the murders, which gave the rescue party plenty of
time to arrive. On top of what I already discussed, the romance was
boring and the sex was cringe-worthy. I don't think "her sex juices
bathed his penis" is sexy in the slightest. It sounds messy. Like the
rest of this book.
Saturday, August 29, 2020
Review: Touch of the Wolf by Vella Munn
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