Click here to read the first four chapters of this book.
This book is the third book of the Last Werewolf Hunter series. It follows Cry for the Moon and Behind Blue Eyes. For those of you who would like to read the series in order, you may want to read those two books first.
More Golden Than Day is probably the deepest book on a philosophical level. Zach is sixteen years old by the time the story opens, and he's grown up enough to see things in a more mature way than ever before.
In this book, Zach unexpectedly encounters Jolie Doucet, a Cajun werewolf hunter from Louisiana who invites him to join her crusade against all the werewolves in the world. Zach is stunned and disappointed to find that the Curse is still very much intact. Not only that, but he soon discovers that it was a much wider and more viciously evil thing than he ever suspected before.
More Golden Than Day focuses on the very real danger that Zach and Cameron find themselves in, but also on Zach's still-unresolved matters of the heart and his continuing spiritual battles. He may have learned something about what friendship and family mean, but he's still wary of getting close to anyone for fear they might betray him later on. He finds himself forced to confront this fear and make a choice that puts everything he's ever believed in or cared about at stake.
The series is continued in Truesilver.
More Golden Than Day is probably the deepest book on a philosophical level. Zach is sixteen years old by the time the story opens, and he's grown up enough to see things in a more mature way than ever before.
In this book, Zach unexpectedly encounters Jolie Doucet, a Cajun werewolf hunter from Louisiana who invites him to join her crusade against all the werewolves in the world. Zach is stunned and disappointed to find that the Curse is still very much intact. Not only that, but he soon discovers that it was a much wider and more viciously evil thing than he ever suspected before.
More Golden Than Day focuses on the very real danger that Zach and Cameron find themselves in, but also on Zach's still-unresolved matters of the heart and his continuing spiritual battles. He may have learned something about what friendship and family mean, but he's still wary of getting close to anyone for fear they might betray him later on. He finds himself forced to confront this fear and make a choice that puts everything he's ever believed in or cared about at stake.
The series is continued in Truesilver.
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