After I read (and reviewed) the first two books in this series, I decided to finish the series and review all of them. I didn’t have any other terribly interesting fiction available at that moment, and there didn’t seem to be many more books – maybe three?
Well, there were actually another eight books (I suspect that some were being added as I read). I regretted my decision. That was too much romance in one go, as I’m not normally a romance reader. Fortunately, most are quite short (compared to my average reads). I’m putting them in order as I read them and Amazon sells them, which isn’t the proper chronological order (for that, go by the author’s order).
- Timber Wolf is reviewed here. I gave it five out of five stars. The fact that it was the first of the books that I read definitely helped its rating. I also kinda love the title pun.
- Librarian Bear is reviewed here. This one only got three out of five stars.
- Sealed With a Kiss is reviewed here. Another three out of five stars.
- A Christmas Like No Otter is reviewed here. It got four out of five stars.
- Hold My Bear is reviewed here. I gave it three out of five stars.
- A Very Meowy Christmas is reviewed here. Another three out of five stars.
- Somebunny to Love is reviewed here. Two out of five stars for this one.
- Buck the Halls is reviewed here. It got three out of five stars.
- Wear Wolf is reviewed here. I gave it five out of five stars.
- Koalafied for Love is reviewed here.
I’m sure that I’ve judged these books more harshly than someone who reads a lot of romance would. It was difficult to get through all ten books! I was disappointed in the lack of plot in books three through ten, especially after the setup provided in Hold My Bear.
But I did love the whole concept of Virtue, which becomes a character in and of itself in the books. It seems like an amazing community, and I wish it was a real place. I also enjoyed the appearance of a growing cast of characters from previous books in each volume. I’m fairly sure Noah (and probably his mother, Mabs) makes an appearance in every book. Sarah the librarian might, too.