Book #1 from the series: The Enchanted Pages of Eros

The Werewolf’s Librarian: Enchanted Pages of Eros book 1

About

A Paranormal Romantic Comedy for Anyone Who’s Ever Been Tired, Cursed, or Just Needed a Damn Bath

Margot Adler is a forty-five-year-old small-town librarian with a full-grown son, an ex-husband she’d rather forget, and a deep, committed relationship with wine and sarcasm. Her dating life? Dead. Her patience? Thin. Her bathtub? Supposed to be her sanctuary.

So when a naked, ancient werewolf appears in her bubbles—summoned by a cursed book Margot didn’t mean to read—she handles it the only way she knows how: screaming, flinging a loofah, and threatening divine retribution.

Fenrir, legendary wolf of myth and fate’s favorite chew toy, has spent centuries imprisoned in ink and silence. But something about Margot—her voice, her strength, her stubborn heart—has cracked the curse. Now he’s real. Mortal. And very, very shirtless in her guest room.

Bound together by magic neither of them understands and a thread neither of them asked for, Margot and Fenrir must navigate meddling gods, midlife insecurities, toaster waffles, ancient curses, and a growing desire that’s anything but mythological.

Love may not be fate’s plan.
But it just might be Eros’s.

Perfect for fans of slow-burn paranormal romance with teeth, The Werewolf’s Librarian is a cozy, magical, laugh-out-loud love story about second chances, sharp women, and the monsters we choose to love anyway.

Praise for this book

I liked the idea that no matter the age, people can hope to find their fated other half - if they are lucky.
This book is a fantasy about the timeless struggle between good and evil. Somehow, I ended feeling sad for Eros's nemesis, because her darkness comes from a place of grief and lost hope, as she had to sacrifice love over duty and this is where her bitterness stems from. But she doesn't fight fair, so all my cheers go to Eros and his librarian champion.

The story is good, but it is so beautifully written that I almost would have ended up not caring if it wasn't, bewitched by words describing the waking of magic and the dawn of hope. I also like the Library itself, it is maybe my favorite character (yes, it is a character if it is sentient!)
I will decidedly read the next book in the series.

Lately I've been giving some books five stars, I thought they deserved it. I was so wrong. I was waiting for the day when I read a book that blew five stars out of the water, and this is it. We need a new button. Five stars and beyond!
You don't know it exists until you know.
What do I do? Demand this button is released or go and downgrade every previous star rated book I've read by one star, or maybe two stars.
What a joy to read. To be truthful I knew when I read at the very beginning of the book.... the page that found you. I started shivering with anticipation, even before chapter 1 started. Was I magically possessed then, really, was I?
There is going to be more books on the series which is great, waiting for them to be released will be torture.
I absolutely loved Margot and Fenrir characters, and the conversations between them were clever. You just kept wanting to hang around them. The magic and mystical and mythical in the book was captivating. And, you just love Margot, her attitude, her life experience, nothing will faze her for long she just adapts, because what other choice do you have.
The writer says it was an absolute joy to write, well, it was an absolute joy to read.