Daei all starts very naive. The nameless postman is shy but lovable. With the fateful bite the disaster takes its course. And I was a long time on his side. But Ryan Mecum makes a bow to genre cliches. At the same time he remains the roots of modern werewolf faithful. Provided that you have to "An American Werewolf in London" measures. I'm doing this.
The haiku verses are decorated with pictures and drawings makes the postman. They help to transfer the mood and often speak louder than the verses themselves. The lyrics are all about his body and his personality. Not so hot as you would like to read it.
The book also has quirks. There still remain some issues that would have to integrate well into the plot. Minispoierl: Who eg bitten the postman only. Mecum here runs just in a one-way street. It Might As Well Call focused. Like his protagonist. It also deters not afraid to go to taste boundaries.
Where he disregards fortunately rape. After I had the film "Big Bad Wolf" is not looked over, I stress the better.
The author wants to make anyone right. Without fat, pseudo-cool and above all without compromise. After brutal comic "Feral", a second ray of hope for people who have once again Bock on good fabric with werewolves.