Member Reviews

cried so hard reading this i threw up! carter and gavin are my favourite duo in the whole greencreek series so it was so nice to get their story. pulled on the heartstrings and ruined my day a few times. the love between carter and gavin is so fulfilling and this book was so satisfying, tragic, romantic, and they all got the most deserved ending that could have been asked for. all in all i think this wrapped up the series incredibly well and i’m going to miss it so much :( packpackpack

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It’s never easy to say goodbye to a beloved series but I know I’ll be seeing my PackPackPack again. Beautiful ending to an incredible journey. 5 stars!

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I've loved every one of these books and I was sad to see the Green Creek series coming to an end. The Bennett Pack is one of my favorite fictional families. I love the brothers, Elizabeth, and the rest of their makeshift family.
My favorite part about this entire series (but this book in particular) is the connection between the Bennett brothers and the way Klune portrayed it perfectly. The love they felt towards one another was so palpable and so touching.

Klune never fails to make us laugh, cry, break our hearts and then put it back together again through his stories.

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i ended up reading the actual book when it was released since the author put it under "read now" by mistake i had to wait to respect his wishes.

i really loved this conclusion and i can totally say this without ANY doubt, this is my favorite adult paranormal series EVER. i can't wait to reread it every year<3

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This is the last book of the series and I loved the dynamics between the characters. The world building was very interesting too. I'm usually not a big fan of the omegaverse but it worked here. Very glad to have read this, thank you for the ARC.

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After I had downloaded this book as "Read Now" the author asked us all to please delete it. I just now realized that I deleted it off of my device, but never got rid of it on here.

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I FEEL SO OVERWHELMED. Emotionally drained? This is just what happens when I binge-read this entire series in a week. Do I recommend binge-reading this series? Maybe take a break in-between books and don’t be like me. Because that is a LOT all at once.

This review won’t reveal any major spoilers! But if you don’t want to know ANYTHING about the book before reading it, why are you here? Please come back and read this review later.

Trigger warnings for graphic violence, death, murder, mentions of emotional abuse, mentions of physical abuse, and mentions of torture.

This series means a lot to me. And to see everything coming full circle is like a kick to the feels. Wolfsong was the first TJ Klune book I ever read. I first read it early 2017 because I heard so many good things about it and I was knew to romance books. Gave it a try, and I guess you could say the rest is history? From reading a boy who was told he was going to get shit all his life and watching him be another boy’s candy canes and pinecones, epic and awesome…to seeing the man he is today in Brothersong. I JUST HAVE SO MANY FEELINGS.

Oh. You thought this book is about Carter and the timber wolf? Don’t worry, because it is! And even though this book wraps up the entire series, it does give Carter and the timber wolf their moment.

Is it safe now to talk about the timber wolf’s name? Because I do want to talk about THAT. GAVIN. Son of Robert Livingstone. Brother to Gordo Livingstone. That was a hell of a thing to find out. I love Gavin with all my heart and I cannot WAIT for people to read this book and draw all the fanart for him. I NEED IT.

I will say overall, Ravensong was one of my favorites (maybe my #1 of the series) because of Gordo. Gordo is my favorite character. He’s has a grumpy exterior but he’s a real softie at heart. He basically became Ox’s older brother and father-figure at the age of 24??? Who DOES that? Gordo, that’s who. So, it’s really no surprise that Gavin quickly became one of my absolute favorite characters while reading this book.

I think my one quibble with this book is that there’s a lot of…talking. Carter talks a lot. You know, Gordo and Gavin? Not big talkers. A lot of other characters talk for what feels like too much and it sometimes did feel like the story was dragging. Just a bit. I did re-read all these books by audio, even the shorts (thank you, Kirt Graves, we don’t deserve you!) so going into this as an e-book was a shock to the system I guess? What are big chunks of words where people are just talking? Save Elijah, I don’t remember all these long discussions/monologues from characters and that’s what some parts of this book felt like, before we REALLY got back into the action. So that’s really the only reason I gave this 4 stars instead of 5. I might up it after listening to the audiobook for this book, but as of the time of this review, it is what it is.

I did cry my eyes out reading this book. At first I was like, this is FINE, I can DO THIS. But when have I ever made it to the end of a Green Creek book without ugly crying? The answer is never and that wasn’t going to change now. It really doesn’t help that every mention of Thomas Bennett makes me cry. What I didn’t fully realize going into this book is that Carter is the oldest and what all that means. Out of all his brothers, he had more times, years, with his father. Not much, but enough? As the oldest, he’s not the alpha. Joe is. Carter’s relationship with Thomas Bennett? UGH MY HEART.

I am really, really, REALLY happy the one person I thought had the greatest chance of being killed off survived this book. Like, SO HAPPY. I was so worried, and I’ve been worried for months now. I wouldn’t have been surprised if it happened, but I would have been absolutely devastated. Maybe I should send an email thanking TJ for not going down that path.

That doesn’t take away that this book is action-packed like all the ones before it. There is one moment where I was thisclose to giving this 1 star if it ended badly but everything works out okay in the end. Gotta love authors that make you question if they’re still a Romance series or not.

Carter and Gavin. I love them. Just two bros. Acting like bros. Their dynamic is wonderful and heartbreaking but also hilarious. These two guys… ❤ And just an aside, if you all are wondering if there are sex scenes? I don’t know if this is going to be a spoiler, but it’s not fade to black and I 100% thought TJ was done writing sex scenes? SO IMAGINE MY SURPRISE. And I know this is going to seem like a random question, but if you’re a gay guy with a particular book from the 70s, what is on page 76??? I guess if you know, you know.

So we know that at the end of Heartsong Gavin was leaving notes for Carter and I have questions about that. Where did he get envelopes, paper, and pen??? Was he…naked…when he left these notes for Carter? I’m just asking the important questions here.

I don’t know if you all know, but I’m one of those chaotic people who flips to the end of the book first so I KNEW what was coming at the very end. I KNEW. But still. When I flipped over to that section, (you’ll know it when you get to it) it was still a punch to the feels and it was just a lot. I am emotionally drained from reading this book, but in a good way. We all need a nice cry every now and then.

Should we talk about Robert Livingstone? He’s a bad man. Even from years past, what he put his wife through, what he did to Gordo, he’s not good by any means and I think what he did to Gordo at such a young age counted as abuse. At first I felt bad for him and what he lost. But after thinking some more about it, I think Robert Livingstone just wanted it all. He wanted to have his wife and Gordo. But he also wanted his tether and Gavin on the side. It was selfishness and greed that made him think he could have it all and not suffer the consequences. Abel and Thomas Bennett aren’t perfect by any means, but Robert Livingstone is a real doozy. Even after all these years, he still thinks he can have Gavin, and that he can even have Robbie. He never deserved his children and the kind-hearted, wonderful people they turned out to be. Thank you for your sperm donation, but these two men grew into lovely people without him and I’m glad they found their way back to the Bennett pack.

This book is about brothers and Carter’s relationship with Kelly and Joe, Gavin and Gordo. There’s so much I can say about this series and the characters. I can just go on forever about them. Know that TJ did right by the characters and their stories and this book is a beautiful and welcome wrap-up to these characters. Am I greedy and also want just ONE! novella or short where there is ZERO angst where everyone is happy from beginning to end. Yes. I want that. But for this series, the Bennett pack, Brothersong is the ending this series deserved.

Is there a hint of what more could come after Brothersong with another character in a possible spin-off series? Yes! But you’ll have to read this book to find out! I admit, I was half-convinced while re-reading the previous books that we were going to wind up with a vampire spin-off but eh. After reading this book, maybe not. What can I say? I love my shifter books but I also have a soft spot for vampire romances.

I love this series really more than I can say. This has been a journey filled with wonder and heart, and introduced me to an author who has quickly become one of my absolute favorites. So I will end with this. Thank you, TJ Klune for writing this series and introducing me to all your books and your characters. Thank you for introducing me and helping me discover myself with your asexual characters who feel so real and who know they can be loved. Thank you, thank you, thank you.

***Thank you to the author for giving me an eARC for review. Was read and reviewed outside of NG, but posting here to get off my feedback list***

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The final book in the Green Creek series. Some of the most beautiful prose I’ve read in years. Simply stunning. If you haven’t read T J Klune , get out and start now. In my opinion he is one of the great writers of this generation. This book brought me to tears. Wonderful !!

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I have been waiting for so long to read this book, and now I still can't believe this is the end.
I absolutely loved this book. I think it was the perfect last book in the series. I am really happy with the ending. As much as I love the Bennett Pack, as much as I am going to miss them, I think it was the best way to finish this story. I think that TJ left them in the perfect place.
I love how soft this book is. It was such a surprise. I was ready to suffer. And don't get me wrong, I cried and cried and cried, because this book has its angsty moments. But the middle of it? It's just... So warm. It made me so happy.
The relationship between Carter and Gavin is so precious. That's the thing, I would love to see more of them. It's like the focus of this book wasn't really on them, which I can understand, because there was a lot going on.
And it was so good to see the whole pack again, especially my favourite boys Mark and Gordo. Speaking about Gordo - his relationship with Gavin was great. I loved to see them together, see them interacting with each other, see how different and similar they are.
I have already read this book twice and I am more than sure that I will soon re-read it again, that's how much I love it.

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My journey with the wolves has been entertaining and rekindled my love for werewolves (why lie, I was always a vampire girl). And as a series lover, saying goodbye to a long story is nothing new and always comes with the fear of "is it the end that the story deserves?" And here I come to tell you what I think about the closure of Green Creek. ⠀

Carter: fabulous, chaotic and clueless. The Bennett who was missing his HEA. An his love interest is someone who took several by surprise when he appeared. As a person obsessed with chaotic characters, I was ready for Carter's book. Ox was the saint of the pack, Gordo the angst character and Kelly the cute one. I needed that hurricane energy. And while I think this book is a fitting ending to the saga, I wouldn't say it was the grand finale I expected. Unfortunately there are many things that took me out of the plot, I don't know how to give the sad news. But, of the 4 books… Brothersong is the one that takes 4th place (and it's sad because Carter was the type of character that I always love).⠀

Is the book bad? No. Did it blow my mind? No. It's a book that takes us back to TJ Klune's trademark on love, friendship and family. It's a book that brings the packpackpack together as it should be, but falls into repetitive elements and many flashbacks. I think the biggest problem with Brothersong is that it doesn't know how to let go of the other books and it doesn't manage to have its own essence and that affects the development of Carter and Gavin. But, the biggest fault of the book is that I found it boring.

And although there are several things that I didn't like....I can say that I close Green Creek with a warm heart. It's better than closing a series with a bad ending (been there done that). So, just as the Bennetts did at the time, I have to say goodbye to the Green Creek, I know that the wolves will be fine and for my part I will remember the story fondly. ⠀

p.s: Thomas Bennet.... I still hate you.

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Let me start by saying BrotherSong was everything I wanted for the final book in the Green Creek series. And I feel that if this series consumed your soul and has become a part of you in the way it has me then you will be more than satisfied with this final installment.

I'm Skipping the synopsis because any worthwhile summary would have spoilers and everyone should enjoy this story spoiler free.

Most readers might go into this thinking its only focus' will be Carter and Gavin but it's meant to represent not only their journey but every member of the Bennett pack. You're still given their relationship as it develops and are able to fall in love with Gavin as his characters opens up, and he finds his place in the pack. Also, if you didn't love Carter before now you definitely will.

Like the title says this story is about Brothers and family and pack. We are given some amazing moments between the Bennett brothers that will leave you in tears. All honesty I cried through a lot of this book, happy tears and devastated tears. Though there were so many heavy parts Klune still managed more than few light-hearted moments between the pack. A book worthy of the series, worthy of the characters and written for its fans !

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Dès que j'ai vu que Brothersong était disponible sur netgalley, j'ai cliqué bien évidemment dessus. Tout en sachant pertinemment que jamais je n'aurais pu obtenir ce service presse. Puis, je me suis rendue compte qu'il était tombé dans ma kindle car mis à disposition par erreur par l'auteur.
J'ai vu bien évidemment par la suite que c'était bel et bien une erreur....

Je ne posterai donc pas mon avis par ici.... et attendrai le jour de sortie ^^

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Why was this kind of underwhelming?

I’m actually super sad right now because I don’t have that usual feeling I do after I read a book in this series.

First off, there were a lot of time jumps in this book, and it was hard to tell where we were. The fact that there’s no label or page break to let you know you’ve left the present has always been an issue in this series. I’ll admit it took me out of the story a bit since I had to keep reminding myself where and when we were.

Second, and this is the one that breaks my heart, Carter and Gavin never had the focus of the story. Their romance was always secondary to wrapping up the plot with Robert Livingstone and I thought that was so unfair. By the end of the book, I felt like I barely knew Gavin. I also had no idea what kind of couple Gavin and Carter made, and I felt like they were overshadowed by everything else. It felt like the romance was just abandoned. I think this book being in Gavin’s POV would have done a lot more for the story, it also would have made sense since every other book wasn’t in a Bennett POV.

The secondary characters took up a lot of the pages in this story, which would have been fine since I love all these characters. But not at the expense of the main couple. And it wasn’t just the secondary characters, it was also very minor characters who got pages and pages dedicated to them. Thomas Bennett got a lot of attention and focus in the story also, which annoyed me to no end. I don’t know, this was supposed to be about Gavin and Carter, and very quickly you could tell that changed to this being all about Green Creek in its entirety. Which again wouldn’t be a bad thing, unless you actually wanted to read about Carter and Gavin.

I felt like the intentions were well meaning. I mean, it’s the last book, so of course you want to show everything and make sure everyone got their goodbye. Of course, I’ll always love seeing the love between Joe, Kelly, and Carter. The love within the pack is always special as well. But there was just a lot to this book and it felt chaotic at times.

Lastly, and I hate myself for this… I definitely skimmed some sections. Gahh, there were just a lot of filler chapters in my opinion. We also go over a lot of info we already learned in previous books. I think those pages should have gone towards the relationship between Carter and Gavin, or something new at least.

The fact that I didn’t love this book is a travesty. This was one of my most anticipated books of the year! I know I made it sound like I hated everything, but that is far from the truth, I’m just kind of bummed. While this didn’t end on the high note I wanted, I will always look back on this series and pack with love.

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“It’s time to show the world why we’re the goddamn Bennett pack.”- Brothersong, TJ Klune.


Brothersong is an Adult paranormal romance featuring werewolves, witches, found family, sibling bonds, and slow burn romance. It’s the final book in the popular Green Creek series, and it was EVERYTHING.


Brothersong follows the POV of Carter Bennett, the eldest and last Bennett Brother to get his story. Even though in the beginning he’s not having a good time- Carter’s humour made my laugh so much throughout the book. I just love him. He’s goofy and ridiculous but also so very protective of the ones he loves. Next to Ox, Carter is my favourite character in the whole series and reading his story was delightful.


The romance, while slow going, was worth it. I have shipped these two from the second book and NOPE we are not having a conversation about how one half of my ship was a wolf for like....two books. I loved Gavin so much. I am a sucker for characters who are protective and Gavin is VERY protective. Though in his defence, Carter seems to be a magnet for trouble! The plot of the book continues on from Heartsong as the pack get ready to take on the biggest threat yet. It was nerve wracking, and I’m surprised I’m not grey, but I wouldn’t change it for the world. Honestly these books were amazing from Wolfsong, but damn they somehow got better as they went on and Brothersong was truly phenomenal.


While the magic system created is one of the most fascinating and unique systems I’ve ever read about, I found this books strength was in the characters. This as the author has said- Truly was a book about brothers and I LOVED IT. The bonds people it’s in the bonds. I have never fully loved a cast of characters as much as I love these. The Bennett pack or as the locals call them- The Gayest pack- own my heart completely. The time I spent reading this book and this series was the best ever. The Green Creek series will forever be my favourite. 5⭐️’s


Thank you so much to @tjklunebooks for providing me with a copy in exchange for an honest review. Save the date- On October 13th, The Bennett pack return for the final battle and it is GLORIOUS.

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I’m conflicted in how I feel about this book. I can’t tell if my expectations were too high, or… something else? I loved the first 10% of this book and the last 20% of this book, and then the 70% in the middle felt like the most unpleasant kind of roller coaster—like the one that jerks you around too fast and hurts you as it does.

Overall:
This book upset me. If it wasn’t the final book of Green Creek, I would have given up on reading it before I reached the halfway mark. The book is confusing for the first third, repetitive but in a way that becomes quickly redundant and exhausting instead of adding anything to the narrative, and moves through time without enough landmarks to let the reader know what’s going on. I understand the purpose of writing this part of the book this way… but for me, it just wasn’t enjoyable to read.

When things become clearer and steadier, I just… have a lot of problems with character and plot choices that were made. There were inconsistencies that I hope will be cleared up in the final version—I know the author mentioned he had done additional edits and this was not the most recent version—but beyond that… Well.

This book triggered me because there are parts where the pack seems to not understand the nature of consent very well and try to pressure Carter in ways I am uncomfortable with. There is a line that invalidates the nature of adopted family as real family, which in a story about found families (and as an adopted person) I found insulting. And, speaking of insulting, the author tries very hard to write a good queer platonic relationship between two characters, and then for some reason has to go through and no less than four times have different people speaking behind those characters’ backs about how weird their relationship is. That’s… not great representation, and it’s insulting to aro-spec people.

This was supposed to be Carter’s story, and I felt like this story was about Carter watching everyone around him be the main character, instead. Carter’s portion of the book is confusing, and once everyone else is there again, Carter is very quickly side-lined in his own book.

Personal gripe, but this story was way more about Thomas Bennett than I expected, especially for a character who has been dead for so long. I hate pretty much every aspect about the Thomas Bennett we get in this book, and it felt like too much and unnecessary.

I also have issues with how the Carter/Gavin relationship is handled, but in an attempt to avoid spoilers or being overly specific, I will just have to say that it felt deeply uncomfortable for me in certain moments, and if anyone wants specifics, I can provide those after the book is published.

Things I Did Like:

Gavin. Look, this character has my whole heart. He saved his book for me. I love him so much more than I can express.

The pack. I love the pack. For the most part, I love the moments in this story when they’re together.

Gordo. Did he show up and save the book for me at one point? Yes, and I appreciate him for it.

So, I suppose, the characters. I still love the characters, and I am a character driven reader.

Things I Didn’t Like That I Haven’t Mentioned Yet:

The representation in this book was shoddy. It relied too strongly on the gender binary, especially when there’s a character in this book who appears to be gender-nonconforming. Also, that was not made nearly as explicit as it should have been, and I feel a little bit robbed of something that could have been great. And, again, the aro representation just ended up making me angry more than anything. This book did not nail the representation aspect for me.

The plot. It felt like this story got really strong right there at the end, and very much struggled to get to that point.

The worldbuilding was confusing and didn’t always make sense. A lot of things (like ghosts) were thrown in and never really explained. You can hand-wave some stuff away as magic, but at some point, I want to know what the hell is going on.

Some stuff gets mentioned but never explained about other members in the pack and the time Carter was away. If you’re going to mention it as important, then tell me what’s up.

Use of parable early in the story. I have reached out and had people who understand this parable explain it to me, because it made no sense to me when told in the book, and the research I have done has not made it any clearer. I think it was probably one of those things that made excellent sense in the author’s head, but it did not survive the transition into words and then my brain. Please, someone, explain it to me if you get it.

Conclusion:
I’m going to stop here, but I have plenty of thoughts about this book. I’m really curious to see what other people are thinking. In conclusion… if you made it this far, by all means, don’t not finish the series. But I would say… maybe lower your expectations going in.

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When I tell you this book made me cry a lot.. I don't think that is going to come across in a way that you'll understand until you read this book. I shed tears, I wept, I held back sobs. Over and over again. I don't know what it is about this author and his ability to wreck me (us) with his words but oh god. Prepare youself for devastation, for beauty, for heartbreak, for healing, for sadness, for quiet moments.. everything.

<i>We weren't Ox and Joe. Or Kelly and Robbie. Or even Gordo and Mark, though the <b>fuck you</b> vibe was apparently a family trait.</i>

I can't really say anything about this beyond that. Not only is BROTHERSONG a sequel but it's an end. For us. Whether something new might begin? Who is to say. So many songs have been sung along the way; from wolves, to ravens, to hearts, and brothers. This series is about bonds, formed out of blood or built out of friendship, connection, and the fact that I'm tearing up as I write this, when I should long have run out of tears, says it all.

"<i>Three years. One month. Twenty-six days. I lived through that. I lived through the thirteen months it took for us to get [spoiler for book three] back. I saw firsthand what happened with Mark and Gordo. And then you decided to.. what? Be wholly original and leave, too?</i>"
"<b>Whoa. That was a bitchy thing to say. Go Ox.</b>"

I reread the books leading up to this, thinking I needed it all fresh in my mind, needed to once again be close to these characters before I could say goodbye, and while I'm sure many Klunatics are doing so? It's not needed. So much of this book hashes out previous events, prior wrongs, in an attempt to come together, to finally do more than just apply bandages on still lingering wounds, so they can let go and face this big conflict that might be the end of them. This family, this pack (packpack), has so much baggage and Klune makes them work through it. It can be agonizing at times, to go through it over and over again, to see the same choices lead to the same mistakes, but it's utterly human; for all that these characters are mostly not.

"<i>Will, sit your ass down and leave my customers alone.</i>"
"<b>I'm his <i>constituent</i>. I have a right to know what's going on in my local government, especially when it involves shape-shifters. Huh. Of all the sentences that have ever come out of my mouth, that one was the strangest.</b>"

Is it perfect? If I were to reread it, would I award it full marks, or would I downgrade like I did on my WOLFSONG revisit? Hard to say. But right now? It gets everything. Not just because I cried an ocean but because I couldn't tear myself away. In a time when even when I'm loving a book I'm still occasionally distracted, reaching for my phone, I didn't do that once. The only moments I stepped away were to blow my nose (seriously, the crying, it was ridiculous) so, I mean, there were a lot of those moments. But it was impossible to look away for anything else.

"<i>Don't take the chance that he'll always be there. We must remember to say what's in our hearts aloud because we can never know if it'll be the last time we'll ever get the chance.</i>"

I can't wait for this book to be out in the world, I can't wait for all the longtime fans to get their paws on it, I feel so lucky to have read this early, particularly as I'm rather new to this world, but I promise you it's worth the wait. You know the drill by now; you'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll do both at the same time, you'll break apart only to be stitched back together. Again and again. Because that's how it goes.

Packpackpack 4ever.

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*Requested the ARC and was given it by TJ Klune*

Carter used his only brain cell and made the worst decision ever, leaving Kelly, aka the only one using his whole brain, heartbroken! Stupid Carter! I'm starting to see how right Gavin was when he gave him this glorious title.

HeartPAIN, sorry, Heartsong, ended in No-Homo-Carter becoming Bi-myself-Carter in matters of seconds. Gavin sacrificed himself going with that monster that my brain can't really picture. How big is it? How furry? I don't really know. I'll wait for fan arts! And what did Carter do? "Oh I'll leave all behind risking my sanity for this boy without asking the help of my brothers/pack/tether" because that's totally the wisest of decisions. Yep, perfect!

Reading of Carter's journey broke my heart. Every page, every flashback, brought me close to tears. I knew why he did what he did, but I thought he didn't need to leave everything and everyone behind. They are a pack, for Werewolf Jesus sake! They're there for each other no matter what. And yes, in the past the pack wasn't the smartest at making decisions but all in all they are still together, more or less healthy and safe, so maybe he could've gone at least to Kelly (poor baby he's the only one who is reasonable) and talked to him in person! TALK! Why is it that hard? Communication is the way!
While I can't tell you anything because of spoilers, and I want everyone to go as oblivious as me into the story, I'm going to try writing what I liked, LOVED, about this chunky book.

The brothers! This book is called Brothersong for a reason. This is not a book about Gavin and Carter; don't get me wrong, you'll get them on page, but they aren't the focus of the book. The brothers! There are many flashbacks and there is just so much brotherly love. And so many laughs! The funniest quotes I highlighted were from conversations between the Bennett brothers! Kelly! There's so much Carter and Kelly to recharge your heart for centuries.

The gayest pack in the entire world. Yes, this!! Queer werewolves!

Gavin! The kindest, grumpiest, cinnamon roll ever! (besides Kelly, for reasons stated above). Gavin was just a Livingstone through and through and I loved him for it. I wanted to shake Gordo so much in both Wolfsong and Ravensong, and Gavin is definitely his brother. Gavin't thoughts and actions melted my heart and I wish Feralsong was longer because the part from his POV was great.

The penis factor. We get to see Carter realizing Gavin has indeed a penis and he has no idea what to do with it. The bi-panic setting is ON!

I want to say so much but I can't, not without spoiling everything but as soon as the book is out, I will wait a bit and then I'm going to post all the quotes and you're going to see the approximately 3450 quotes I've highlighted and everyone will thank me for that!

The mystical moon played its magic again and gave me all the emotions imaginable and I'll be forever glad for TJ for giving us these queer werewolves, the also queer witches, the again also queer humans. Thanks for the queerness, TJ! Thanks you for Green Creek, for the candy canes and pinecones, for the epic and awesome, for the dirt and leaves and rain, for the grass and lake water and sunshine, for a forest so alive. Packpackpak! *crying all the tears*

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The author said this book was uploaded to Netgalley incorrectly and asked reviewers NOT to read it here. Therefore, I will purchase this book upon release and update this review after I have read it.

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This version will not be reviewed as the author uploaded onto Netgalley incorrectly. I will update this review once I have read the book, whether through Netgalley or through a purchase!

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I love TJ. This was uploaded as "Read Now" in error. He's asked his fans to delete it, which is what I'm going to do. I'll request again if it comes up for review.

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