

Honestly Fair Game is my least favorite book in the series, which is weird because it does so much for it. Graham does a fantastic job voicing these, and that's all that can be really be said about it. I'm also lucky that I take a very untraveled path home because otherwise far to many people would have seen me grinning or frowning at seemingly nothing. Graham's rendition has, at times, forced me to slap a hand over my own mouth to stifle my giggles. I listen mostly on my 2 hour walk home after work at 1am and need by quite when crossing the residential parts of town. Holter Graham once again delivered an amazing performance that brought the story to life.

My feelings for this book are complicated. I'm going to preface this review with a warning. And now Anna and Charles have put themselves right in the killer's sights.

They quickly realize that not only the last two victims were werewolves - all of them were. Nevertheless, Charles and Anna are sent to Boston when the FBI requests the pack's help on a local serial killer case. Infractions that could have been overlooked in the past must now be punished, and the strain of doing his father's dirty work is taking a toll on Charles. Now that the werewolves have revealed themselves to humans, they can't afford any bad publicity. The son - and enforcer - of the leader of the North American werewolves, Charles is a dominant alpha, while Anna, an omega, has the rare ability to calm others of her kind. And in the case of werewolves Anna Latham and Charles Cornick, they mate. Patricia Briggs' Alpha and Omega series - set in a world of shifting shapes, loyalty, and passion - brings werewolves out of the darkness and into a society in which fear and prejudice could make the hunters prey.
