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Where Foxes Hunt with Wolves
- M/M Paranormal Romance, Folk Lore, Book 2
- Narrated by: Wyatt Baker
- Length: 11 hrs and 51 mins
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Summary
"You are responsible for what you tame."
Yevhen. Forest ranger. Werewolf. Stifled by pack rules.
Radek. Foxy ginger brat. Changeling. Will avoid responsibility at all cost.
Banished from his pack for being gay, Yev has one last chance to redeem himself in the eyes of his family. He needs to stick to the rules for a year and bury his sexuality forever. Shouldn’t be so hard, since he can’t have a relationship with a human without revealing his werewolf nature.
That is, until one night, a drunk ginger brat points a rifle in his face.
Radek finished university months ago but thinking about the future is not on his agenda. Life would be great if he could just avoid any and all responsibilities.
He doesn’t want to be his mom’s caregiver, doesn’t want to take over the family fox farm, doesn’t want to return to his village, and doesn’t want a steady boyfriend.
His world turns upside down when he’s arrested by an infuriatingly attractive forest ranger. If that wasn’t bad enough, he’s now hunted by werewolves for discovering their drug-smuggling operation, and...he turned into a fox?
Helpless and wounded, he seeks sanctuary with the very man who got him into this mess, but what’s a fox to do? If there’s someone who can help him understand his changeling origin, it’s Yev. A werewolf.
Possible spoilers:
Genre: paranormal M/M romance with dark elements. Contains scorching hot, emotional, explicit scenes with a hint of kink and lots of biting!
Themes: folklore, forbidden love, hurt/comfort, little town, homophobia, coming out, fish out of water, shifters, discovering magic, age gap, size difference, changeling, animal rights activism, growing up, werewolf, family issues
Warning: This story contains scenes of violence, offensive language, bodily harm, animal cruelty, and morally ambiguous characters.
What listeners say about Where Foxes Hunt with Wolves
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- Ida Umphers
- 15-09-20
Amazing mix
If you read the blurb for this one and thought, "Surely, the author hasn't thrown all of the listed elements into the mix?" believe me they are all there. I don't know many authors who could pull off all these things in one story and make it comprehensible, completely absorbing and searing hot but K.A. Merikan is definitely one of them. This one is about medium dark along Merikan's darkness spectrum. Not as light as The Art of Mutual Pleasure but not as dark as Where the Devil or Feel My Pain. I loved the characters and the story as well as watching a master keep all these plates spinning at the same time with never a one dropped or broken. Wyatt Baker pulls out all the stops with this one and the performance is amazing. He gets all the characters just right at all the various points in the story so you actually hear their personalities change as the story progresses.
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- Thais Dematte
- 15-09-20
Awesome!
This one was way better than the first one (and I really liked that one). But this shifter story is very unique, not a cookie cutter like most of novels of this genre. I missed the folklore a bit, I wish it had a little bit more. I was glad to see Emil and Adam, although I would love if the four could share each other's secrets. Wyatt baker deliver a wonderful narration like always.
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- Trio
- 15-09-20
Wonderfully Creative! Wyatt Baker is Spectacular!
K.A. Merikan’s Where Foxes Hunt with Wolves is the second book in their Folk Lore series. Taking place in the same village as the first novel, Where the Devil Says Goodnight, some of the characters are familiar, but you won’t have any trouble reading them independently.
I do, however, recommend doing the books in this series in audio.
Wyatt Baker does an absolutely stunning job with these stories. His accents are flawless, and he provides wonderful variety in this extensive cast of characters. Mr. Baker enhances the darkness of the mood, the spookiness of the surroundings... his performance just brings the whole experience to life.
Filled with folklore and mystery, the Merikans never pull their punches, and Where Foxes Hunt with Wolves is dark and dramatic and kinky and bloody. Yep, pretty much everything we love about their novels.
I'm loving these unique characters, and each of the stories has had some intriguing (and creative) family drama. Hurt/comfort to the nth degree for both of the MCs, and the fast pace never slows down. Very exciting!
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- Sabbath
- 06-09-20
Gut wrenching and heart stopping
I found this this story between Yevhen and Radek to be gripping. I couldn’t stop listening and Baker’s narration just kept me wanting to listen more. This book is a great stand alone book. Merikan has a great gift for writing stories that will captivate readers.
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- PL
- 05-09-20
Fantastic
These two authors never cease to amaze me.
Yev and Radek were so completely different yet despite their rough start, they come together, to form a bond that made my toes curl.
This was a fantastic story. The narrator truly outdone himself - great performance.
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- Erryn Barratt
- 22-09-20
The Wolves & Foxes Play When Shepherds are Away
Well, K.A. Merikan has done it again. I enjoyed the first Folklore book, and so decided to dive in and try this one. Not at all what I was expecting. But that is typical for this writing duo.
I don’t read many shifter books, but after this one, I might just do more.
Radek is a brat. An entitled brat who has an education but has done nothing with it. He’s coasting on family money, never questioning where it comes from or on whose back it is being earned. He meets Yev, a forest ranger, who arrests his bratty tush. Nothing comes of it, of course, and the two men go their separate ways. Radek isn’t satisfied, though, and he tries to take revenge. That also fails, but Yev challenges him to go to the family fox farm.
Now, here’s where the warnings come in. There is animal cruelty in this book and I found it difficult to cope with. I’m never sure with a Merikan book if I’m going to get a true happy ending, so I was on edge with regard to the abuse. The warnings also mention violence, bodily harm, and offensive language – all things that were present. Interestingly, I didn’t find the morally ambiguous characters as ambiguous as some of their others. Maybe I’m becoming inured to questionable behavior.
Radek is a changeling and his transformation is remarkable. I wanted an Ember of my own, if I’m being honest. And Yev being a werewolf made him empathetic to Radek. I liked how the two men grew to care about each other. I have to note that I didn’t realize foxes were canines. Given my affinity to dogs, I’m not surprised foxes have always held my attention.
This story is violent. And cute. And thought-provoking. And gut-churning. I had to work for it and I like those kinds of books. The book made me uncomfortable at times and I think that’s the sign of a really good read.
I’ll mention Wyatt Baker. He does a great job with K.A. Merikan books and I was glad to see he was helming this one. Overall, I’m glad I enjoyed the plunge. Can’t wait to see if there is a third book coming.
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- A.K.
- 05-09-20
Loved it
I was surprised in the best way by this story. I've read a few K.A. Merikan books and find them to be rough and macho and hard core. This was like that for the first 25%, but then became a love story and was romantic and hopeful.
I ended up really caring about Radek as his life started to fall apart. I loved the fox addition to the story and was enthralled the entire listen.
*one thing that bothered me was that even though the injury was mentioned throughout the story, there were parts where Radek was able to do things he shouldn't have been able to.
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- L.D.
- 05-09-20
When a Fox Loves a Wolf
Where Foxes Hunt Wolves is the second book in the Folk Lore series but it easily read on its own. I haven’t read book one yet, and had no trouble following along and enjoying book two. I read the blurb for book one and noticed the main characters, Emil and Adam, were present in book two. This makes me want to read book one immediately, and I’m sure for people who have already the Emil and Adam’s story, it will be nice to see them happy in book two.
Radek is a spoiled young man who’s never had to make a hard decision in his life. And then he turns into a fox and suddenly everything is different. Yevhen is a werewolf who’s been making hard decisions his entire life due to his desire to stay with his pack. But once he meets Radek, Yev finally makes a decision that puts himself first. These two men have their damages and own personal demons they must conquer, but together they are incredible.
This is one of my favorite books of the year. I loved every moment of it. Radek and Yev are perfect for each other, and I loved everything about their relationship from the power dynamics to the tenderness and protectiveness. The sex scenes were fabulous and kinky with that edge of raw desire, rough sex, and D/s play that I enjoy reading. The plot was interesting and I truly became invested in what was going to happen to the fox farm and Radek and Yev’s relationship. The story was complicated, but it was easy to follow along because K.A. Merikan knows how to masterfully tell intricate stories in a beautiful way.
The audiobook was narrated by Wyatt Baker who did a great job. He had to do a range of voices from little foxes to big, burly werewolves, and all the other characters in between. He did a fantastic job with all the voices and it was easy to follow along in the audiobook. I loved his audio performance and really felt it enhanced the intensity of the action for me. The audiobook production was stellar and I highly enjoyed this book. I can’t recommend this book enough.
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- Kindle Customer
- 01-09-20
🎧 LesCourt Reviewer 🎧
Where Foxes Hunt With Wolves(Folk Lore book 2)by K.A. Merikan. This story develops nicely. A good combination of world building and character development. I really enjoyed this story . Looking forward to the next book.
The Narrator Wyatt Baker did a fantastic job bringing these characters and story to life.
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- Pixiebell
- 06-09-20
Where Foxes Hunt With Wolves
Where Foxes Hunt With Wolves is the second in the Folk Lore series but can be listened to as a stand-alone.
K.A. Merikan are known for their darker side of writing and this book doesn’t disappoint. It reminds me very much of a Grimms Fairytale, although set in modern times, it has a timelessness feeling about it that it could be anytime. The village, Dybukowo, in Poland, feels dark and almost medieval and is inhabited by a community that is full of prejudice, superstitions and pagan rituals.
So it’s no surprise to find werewolves and fox shifters in this book.
Yev and Redek are completely opposite to each other but as they say opposites attract and the attraction is undeniable.
The story was amazing and I’m hoping there will be another in this series.
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