
Book Review: Wolfsong
Book details
About the story
MM human–werewolf romance: a coming-of-age story told through Ox’s simple, earnest POV. It follows his life as a human growing up within a werewolf pack, centered on found family, loyalty, grief, different kinds of love, and the slow, quiet bond he builds with Joe.
Mood
Emotional & Angsty
World setting
Genres
Plot pacing
Medium-paced plot
Relationship tropes
Ending type
HFN (Happy for Now)
Content warnings
Attempted murder, Blood, Death, Graphic sexual content, Hunting, Injury, Kidnapping, Murder, Torture, Violence / Brutal injuries
Kinks
Anal play / sex
About the series
Wolfsong is book #1 of the Green Creek series
Well, this is the first book of the series, so technically yes, but check the ending type above in case you want to avoid cliffhangers.
Book Blurb
Wolfsong is a heartfelt story of queer love, loyalty, and found family from TJ Klune, the Sunday Times bestselling author of The House in the Cerulean Sea.
Ox Matheson was twelve when his father taught him a lesson: Ox wasn’t worth anything and people would never understand him. Then he left.
Ox was sixteen when the energetic Bennett family moved in next door, harbouring a secret that would change him forever. For the family are shape-shifters, who can transform into wolves at will. Drawn to their magic, loyalty and enduring friendships, Ox feels a gulf between this extraordinary new world and the quiet life he’s known. He also finds an ally in Joe, the youngest Bennett boy. Joe is charming and handsome, but haunted by scars he cannot heal.
Ox was twenty-three when murder came to town, and tore a hole in his heart. Violence flared, tragedy split the pack and Joe left town, leaving Ox behind. Three years later, the boy is back. Except now he’s a man – and Ox can no longer ignore the song that howls between them.
Wolfsong is the first book in the beloved Green Creek series by bestselling author TJ Klune. Continue the journey with Ravensong.
Praise for TJ Klune:
‘Like being wrapped up in a big gay blanket’ – V. E. Schwab, author of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
‘A whimsical, warm-hearted fantasy’ – The Guardian
‘A radiant treat’ – Locus MagazineWolfsong is a heartfelt story of queer love, loyalty, and found family from TJ Klune, the Sunday Times bestselling author of The House in the Cerulean Sea.
Ox Matheson was twelve when his father taught him a lesson: Ox wasn’t worth anything and people would never understand him. Then he left.
Ox was sixteen when the energetic Bennett family moved in next door, harbouring a secret that would change him forever. For the family are shape-shifters, who can transform into wolves at will. Drawn to their magic, loyalty and enduring friendships, Ox feels a gulf between this extraordinary new world and the quiet life he’s known. He also finds an ally in Joe, the youngest Bennett boy. Joe is charming and handsome, but haunted by scars he cannot heal.
Ox was twenty-three when murder came to town, and tore a hole in his heart. Violence flared, tragedy split the pack and Joe left town, leaving Ox behind. Three years later, the boy is back. Except now he’s a man – and Ox can no longer ignore the song that howls between them.
Wolfsong is the first book in the beloved Green Creek series by bestselling author TJ Klune. Continue the journey with Ravensong.
Praise for TJ Klune:
‘Like being wrapped up in a big gay blanket’ – V. E. Schwab, author of The Invisible Life of Addie LaRue
‘A whimsical, warm-hearted fantasy’ – The Guardian
‘A radiant treat’ – Locus Magazine
Rating & review
My review
CAREFUL: the official blurb for this book is basically one giant spoiler. I hate when a blurb summarizes half the plot, and Wolfsong’s blurb does exactly that. So if you’re new to the book, skip it. Just read the story.
Now—onto the review.
There are books that are so beautiful they almost hurt, not because they’re sad but because they’re that emotionally rich. Wolfsong is exactly that kind of book.
This is essentially Ox’s life story, from early adolescence into adulthood. The MM romance with Joe is a subplot—an important one, but still secondary to Ox’s journey and the themes of love, loyalty, grief, family, and belonging.
I first read this in 2022. I re-read it in 2025 and it remains one of the best-written stories I’ve ever picked up. For a book with almost no spice, it has to be exceptional for me to give it five stars—and it absolutely is.
Ox and the Narrative Style
Ox is “simple” in the way he thinks—not stupid, not incapable, just wired differently. He’s slow to process things, he’s literal, and people bully him because of it.
“My daddy thought I was slow. My mom said it wasn’t a race.”
That line sets the tone for the entire book. The whole story is written from Ox’s POV, with a clarity and simplicity that becomes the book’s emotional backbone. Reading the book feels like seeing the world through Ox’s lens—direct, literal, simple—as he grows up.
Worldbuilding
Packs have one Alpha and several Betas. Omegas aren’t part of packs—they’re basically wolves who’ve gone rogue and lost their human side. All wolves need a connection to something in order to hold on to their humanity; for an Alpha that could be their land, their pack, or anything that grounds them.
There can only be one Alpha per pack. Alphas have red eyes and that “alpha spirit” is inherited in a way. Betas have orange eyes, and Omegas have purple ones. Wolves shift every full moon but can also shift whenever they want. They have soulmates they recognize by scent.
Humans don’t know about the supernatural world. Witches exist, and humans can be turned into werewolves. Ox, the protagonist, is human—and his love interest is a werewolf.
Characters
Ox (Oxnard): Loyal to his core. Gentle. Misunderstood. Someone people underestimate because of his simplicity. His arc revolves around what it means to become “the man,” to protect, to choose family.
Honestly, Ox is the only character that matters for this review—even more than Joe. Joe is important, but he’s still a secondary presence compared to Ox’s coming-of-age.
CAREFUL: the official blurb for this book is basically one giant spoiler. I hate when a blurb summarizes half the plot, and Wolfsong’s blurb does exactly that. So if you’re new to the book, skip it. Just read the story.
Now—onto the review.
There are books that are so beautiful they almost hurt, not because they’re sad but because they’re that emotionally rich. Wolfsong is exactly that kind of book.
This is essentially Ox’s life story, from early adolescence into adulthood. The MM romance with Joe is a subplot—an important one, but still secondary to Ox’s journey and the themes of love, loyalty, grief, family, and belonging.
I first read this in 2022. I re-read it in 2025 and it remains one of the best-written stories I’ve ever picked up. For a book with almost no spice, it has to be exceptional for me to give it five stars—and it absolutely is.
Ox and the Narrative Style
Ox is “simple” in the way he thinks—not stupid, not incapable, just wired differently. He’s slow to process things, he’s literal, and people bully him because of it.
“My daddy thought I was slow. My mom said it wasn’t a race.”
That line sets the tone for the entire book. The whole story is written from Ox’s POV, with a clarity and simplicity that becomes the book’s emotional backbone. Reading the book feels like seeing the world through Ox’s lens—direct, literal, simple—as he grows up.
Worldbuilding
Packs have one Alpha and several Betas. Omegas aren’t part of packs—they’re basically wolves who’ve gone rogue and lost their human side. All wolves need a connection to something in order to hold on to their humanity; for an Alpha that could be their land, their pack, or anything that grounds them.
There can only be one Alpha per pack. Alphas have red eyes and that “alpha spirit” is inherited in a way. Betas have orange eyes, and Omegas have purple ones. Wolves shift every full moon but can also shift whenever they want. They have soulmates they recognize by scent.
Humans don’t know about the supernatural world. Witches exist, and humans can be turned into werewolves. Ox, the protagonist, is human—and his love interest is a werewolf.
Characters
Ox (Oxnard): Loyal to his core. Gentle. Misunderstood. Someone people underestimate because of his simplicity. His arc revolves around what it means to become “the man,” to protect, to choose family.
Honestly, Ox is the only character that matters for this review—even more than Joe. Joe is important, but he’s still a secondary presence compared to Ox’s coming-of-age.
Character & romance details
About the romance
3
Slow burn
MM
Relationship tropes
Kinks
Anal play / sex
About the male lead
Ocupation
Mechanic, Student, Works for the pack
Virgin protagonist?
Yes
About the love interest
Ocupation
Student, Works for the pack
Virgin love interest?
Yes
Personality
Jealous, Protective
Who will love this book
Wolfsong is perfect for readers who enjoy:
• MM romance that’s low-spice but high-emotion
• Found family stories that feel warm, intimate, and a little heartbreaking
• Coming-of-age arcs centered on a deeply loyal, gentle, underestimated MC
• Werewolf lore with pack bonds, magic, and an emotional focus instead of action-heavy shifts
• Quiet, slow, tender romance that builds over years
• Stories about different kinds of love—family, friendship, romantic, pack
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Oh hey! I’m Becky, book hugger and the one-woman team behind RBM. I hope my reviews help you find a story you’ll love.
