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Rise of Fenrir

By: S.D. McKittrick
Narrated by: Nicholas Gilomen
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Publisher's summary

What would you do if you woke up in the body of a wolf?

Fen wakes in the forest of an unfamiliar world with barely any memories of the night before. What he can piece together is one of two things. He either died and was reincarnated, or this was an isekai scenario. What he doesn't know is which. Only a brief introduction to the world tells him that he has skills and can learn magic. But it's up to him to figure out how. And for a wolf in the middle of the forest, what is he to do?

Follow Fen as he learns how to evolve his skills and level his attributes, seemingly from the most unusual way possible. His life takes him through the years as he grows alongside an unassuming elf. When their paths cross 18 years later, Fen is thrown into a situation where he's forced to mingle with the human races for the first time.

Kicked out of his forest, Fen will have to regain his humanity if he is to secure his place among the races. But in 18 years, he will face something far harder than anything before. When at attack on the human city he dwells in pulls him back into his destructive ways, he has to make a hard decision. He will have to combine his humanity and his bestial side if he wants to come out on top.

This series is harem free and will remain as such.

©2023 Sean McKittrick (P)2023 Sean McKittrick
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What listeners say about Rise of Fenrir

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  • Overall
    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars
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    4 out of 5 stars

It’s cool. The ending was predictable

A good story. The ending banter is mediocre and the side characters are basic. There conversations are really bad. Just skip it and it should be fine.

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  • Overall
    5 out of 5 stars
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Keep them coming

I did not see that ending well done can’t wait for the next book. Thank you

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

Good book with a bad ending.

This is a great book about a man who reincarnates as a wolf, but a terrible book about how a legendary wolf tries to save a girl. I wouldn't recommend this book to people who hate plot holes but if you can over look those plot holes you will like this book.

Spoilers Ahead.

The main character is an S rank monster atleast 40ft in height about half way through the book but proceeds to walk at a humans pace when going to save a girl who he "cares" for because he has to train other girls he cares for. So the girl he "cares" for the most gets turned into a demon lord. This could have been easily stopped if he had left the 2 girls in a safe place and went to help the one he "cares" for the most by himself but he doesn't.

The end of this book is infuriating and has attacking Russia in winter levels of stupidity.

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

very floppy

it feels like the characters would flip and flop through their moods and what they believe in and it tend the whole story into whack has been better if it was actually character development

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  • Overall
    2 out of 5 stars
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    3 out of 5 stars
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    2 out of 5 stars

Amateuritus and crappy ending

The first 2/3s of this book was pretty good. The narrator and the author both seem new to their respective rolls and so the over all quality isn’t top tier but overall enjoyable nonetheless.

However, it wasn’t until the demons got involve that I felt the story went downhill for me.

It genuinely didn’t make sense to me that Fenrir wasn’t pursuing the kidnappers at maximum haste. Instead it is written into some grand adventure whilst Fenrir is teaching and mentoring two low level party members. The sheer lack of urgency in Fenrir baffles me. Fenrir could have easily gone ten times faster without being some sort of trainer and caught up to the kidnappers before the bs that was the ending came about.

I also feel that the author struggled with portraying Fenrir as a nonhuman character who has little regard for humans anymore, as throughout the book Fenrir constantly flip-flops about caring and not caring.

Overall, good concept, but poorly executed.

I do not recommend this book.

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