• Blood Binds the Pack

  • By: Alex Wells
  • Narrated by: Penelope Rawlins
  • Length: 16 hrs and 40 mins
  • 4.7 out of 5 stars (23 ratings)

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Blood Binds the Pack  By  cover art

Blood Binds the Pack

By: Alex Wells
Narrated by: Penelope Rawlins
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Publisher's summary

Join the fight for the people and power of Tanegawa's World in this exhilarating sequel to Hunger Makes the Wolf.

War is coming to Hob Ravani's world. The company that holds it in monopoly, TransRift Inc, has at last found what they're looking for - the source of the power that enables their Weathermen to rip holes in space and time, allowing the interstellar travel all of human society now takes for granted. And they will mine every last grain of it from Tanegawa's World no matter the cost.

Since Hob Ravani used her witchy powers to pull a massive train job and destroy TransRift Inc's control on this part of the planet, the Ghost Wolves aren't just outlaws, they're the resistance. Mag's miner collective grows restless as TransRift pushes them ever harder to strip the world of its strange, blue mineral. Now Shige Rollins has returned with a new charge - Mr Yellow, the most advanced model of Weatherman, infused with the recovered mineral samples and made into something stranger, stronger, and deadlier than before. And Mr Yellow is very, very hungry.

©2018 Alex Wells (P)2018 Audible, Ltd

What listeners say about Blood Binds the Pack

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  • Overall
    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

Firefly + Dune + Gangs of NY = weird western gold

“Thirsty, brother?”
An excellent conclusion to this weird western that feels strongly like known sci-fi greats and yet is also refreshingly different. If you thought Firefly’s blue gloved monstrosities were darkly fascinating, then the Weatherman will give you all the best horror vibes. I think that overall tone of alien voodoo, and humans messing with supernatural forces they don’t understand, was what I liked best about the duology.

“I have become the storm”
The kaleidoscope of accents and the Bronn-worthy level of F bombs settled in by the second half. I felt the language matched the dusty frontier setting, although I’m rather bemused that the romance was so vaguely written in comparison. But, there was heart enough to this story, especially as it relates to the blood that binds the Wolfpack.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Would love more books in this world.

This is the second, and appears to be the final, book in the Ghost Wolves series. I’m not sure if there were more books planned or if the author only took two books to tell the story of Hob Ravani and Magdala “Mag” Kushtrim. Either way, I enjoyed this story as much as the first book, Hunger Makes the Wolf. And while I would love more time with these characters, this did wrap up the story well.

Hob has become the de facto leader of the Ghost Wolves, a mercenary biker group on Tanegawa’s World, a harsh desert planet run by TransRift, a corporation that exploits the people of this planet to mine a special rock (and farm, though we don’t see much about the farming part of the planet). She has “witchy” powers that scares many people, even some of her own gang, though they still trust her. She has the ability to control and create fire.

Mag is related to Hob, if not by blood, but through Old Nick, who is Mag’s uncle and Hob’s adopted father/mentor. She is also witchy. She’s able to control people’s will with her mind. She currently lives with one of the lead miners and is working to get the miner to have a revolution against TransRift.

I really enjoyed both books in this series, a lot. Alex Wells tells a wonderful story with even better characters. I liked seeing this story unfold from many different POVs throughout both books. There is some romance, some action, some happy times and some very sad times. The characters are also very diverse in personality, race, sexual orientation, humanity (this is science fiction, so there are some that aren’t quite human) and more. This diversity really helped to make the story that much more interesting. I really can’t recommend this series enough. I enjoyed it so much.

Narration:
This series was the first time I’ve listened to Penelope Rawlins. I enjoyed her take on the series. The voices she chose for the wide array of characters was spot on. I really loved the voice of Coyote the most. Coyote is one of Hob’s wolves. He has a swagger about him and she really brought that out in his voice, also the voice of the Bone Collector. He was a very interesting character and I felt the voice for him was perfect. I would love to listen to her again. I will be looking for more book performed by her.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

excellent narrator

good story. but a superb narrator makes all the difference. accents were excellent. a lovely voice to listen too.

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    5 out of 5 stars
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More, Please!

Alex Wells tells a mean story, in addition to being a snazzy dresser! I can already hear those folks complaining about language...well, this story needed rough language & these characters spoke it well. Great characters, great storyline & I sincerely hope that more are on the way!

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    5 out of 5 stars
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    5 out of 5 stars

Socialism, in Space!

I loved it. What an excellent book. Surprising, satisfying, action packed but also philosophical. I highly recommend this series. I hope there will be more books.

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