
Amanda C. (
minathia) wrote on 10/20/2007...
4 member(s) found this review helpful.
Regeane has grown up with an abusive family. They treat her with abuse and disdain - even fear - because she is a werewolf. They try to control Regeane because she is distantly related to Charlemange, and her family hopes to benefit from this. They get their chance when a marrige is finally arranged, but Regeane is afraid for her life if anyone discovers her ability to turn into a wolf
The story is well written and very descriptive. There are a couple of sex scenes, including a woman/woman coupling. However I found them to be rather tasteful in their depiction, and not overly graphic.

Cheryl R. (
Spuddie) - St Louis Park, MN wrote on 8/1/2007...
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
First in a series. Historical fiction mingled with fantasy in this tale of a young wolf-woman named Regeane set in during the decline of the Roman empire. Borchardt has her sister's (Anne Rice) flair for invoking horror without the excessive wordiness that makes some of Rice's books a slog-fest, at least for me. The book also had bits of explicit sex in it, but the scenes were fairly well done and not just gratuitous groping so I didn't roll my eyes excessively or anything. LOL
Her historical detail was also decidedly un-romanticized and very realistic sounding, quite violent and descriptive, and that in and of itself often evoked enough 'horror' without even mentioning the wolf sharing a body with a human woman! Compelling and interesting read, and I will definitely be seeking the other two books in this trilogy.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
See Night of the Wolf by same author. The books are related. Set in decadent Rome of the Dark Ages comes Regeane, an enigmatic young woman distantly related to Charlemagne. But the blood she has inherited from her murdered father makes her much more than a child of royalty...woman and wolf, hunter and hunted. Betrothed to a barbarian lord she has never see, Regeane is beset my enemies. Great story. Authoress is the sister of Anne Rice.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
I was pleasantly suprised when I read this book. The story keeps your attention throughout. It's a refreshing change to the unrealistic Anita Blake and other fantasy series with strong sexual themes.
3 member(s) found this review helpful.
In my opinion, Alice Borchardt is a better writer than her sister, Anne Rice. Anne is great most of the time, but Alice is great all of the time. This series was ahead of its time; now that vampires and dark romatic fantasy are all the rage, it fits right in with the best of them.

Lenore D. (
Lenore) wrote on 11/6/2007...
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
This is Anne Rice's sister...she's trying to go for the same sweeping feel of history that some of Anne Rice's novels have (this one takes place during the fall of the Roman Empire), but frankly, she misses her mark - she's just not as talented as her sister. Still, if you didn't have Rice (her earlier works, of course - as her later ones have also fallen short) - she'd be passable. The story goes in jumps and starts however, and she doesn't always explain things well at all. In addition, I found the female lead character annoyingly easy to victimize. She lacked the "spark" that makes some characters great...and she seemed naive and too willing to follow others instead of striking out to do what's best for her...then she's sort of "rewarded" for all this complaisance by basically falling into the arms of the one man who would be perfectly matched to her - she just falls into it by accident, or serendipity if you're a more optimistic type! Its unlikely and a bit silly if you ask me. Anyway, you may like it more than I did

Terrence W. (
770days) wrote on 1/9/2006...
2 member(s) found this review helpful.
A decent read - falls a bit short of what it set out to be, but in the end, an entertaining romantic fantasy. More for the ladies than the guys (and I'm hardly the typical male fantasy reader) but worth reading nonetheless.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Very strange but a good read.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
The Silver Wolf is a richly textured, lush epic of history, romance, and fantasy, all interwoven like a beautiful tapestry.
1 member(s) found this review helpful.
Shapechangers and magic - a great fantasy read!