What Spanish-speaking readers across Latin America are saying about Run with the Wolves.
M
Mariana Castillo
Mérida, Yucatán
Vol I · The Pack
Gripping historical dark-fantasy with emotional depth
I found Run with the Wolves Volume One: The Pack to be a gripping historical dark-fantasy novel that does not treat werewolves as simple monsters. Willie's journey immediately caught my attention because he begins as an ordinary young man with very little control over his own life, and then he is thrown into a violent, supernatural world that forces him to question everything he believed about good, evil, loyalty, and survival. What stood out to me most was the emotional conflict inside the Pack. Woodrow, especially, feels like a leader burdened by guilt and duty rather than a villain. I also appreciated the medieval setting because it gives the book a rough, dangerous, lived-in atmosphere. I would recommend this book to readers who like dark fantasy with emotional depth.
A
Alejandro Mendoza
Guadalajara, Mexico
Vol I · The Pack
Cinematic and memorable
This book has the kind of opening that immediately pulls a reader into danger. Willie being left alone on the farm, the full moon rising, the animals in danger, and the arrival of the Pack all create a strong cinematic feeling. I liked that the story does not rush past the consequences of the attack. Willie's bite is not just a plot device; it becomes the center of his emotional and physical transformation. The Pack is frightening, but the more I learned about them, the more I understood that they are also victims of something larger than themselves. That complexity made the book more memorable than a typical werewolf story.
C
Camila Herrera
Mexico City, Mexico
Vol I · The Pack
Heart beneath the darkness
What I enjoyed most about The Pack is that it has heart beneath the darkness. The violence and horror are present, but the deeper story is about identity and whether someone can remain human after being changed against their will. Willie's fear and anger felt believable, especially because he loses the simplicity of his old life in one terrifying night. I also liked the Sanctuary and the Oddities because they give the story a sense of refuge for those who do not belong anywhere else. That theme is powerful. It made me think about how societies often reject people they do not understand.
S
Sebastián Vargas
San José, Costa Rica
Vol I · The Pack
A serious fantasy with strong historical foundation
Run with the Wolves Volume One: The Pack feels like a serious fantasy novel with a strong historical foundation. I liked that the author built the world carefully instead of relying only on werewolf action. The kingdoms, the border tensions, the social classes, and the medieval farm life all make Willie's story feel grounded. Then, when the supernatural elements appear, they feel more dramatic because the world already seems real. The Pack itself is the strongest part of the book for me. They are dangerous, yes, but they also carry shame, discipline, loyalty, and pain. That balance gives the story emotional weight.
V
Valeria Ruiz
Puebla, Mexico
Vol I · The Pack
Strong atmosphere and tragic transformation
This novel has a strong atmosphere. The full moon, the medieval countryside, the mountain forests, and the hidden kingdom of Varakov give the book a dark and mysterious tone. Willie is easy to care about because he is not powerful at the beginning. He is a young worker with dreams, loyalty, and responsibilities, and then everything is taken from him. That makes his transformation feel tragic. I also appreciated that the Pack is not written as mindless beasts. Woodrow's guilt and leadership make him one of the most interesting characters. The book asks whether monsters are born, created, or misunderstood, and that question gives the story depth.
D
Diego Fernández
Bogotá, Colombia
Vol I · The Pack
Medieval conflict meets supernatural horror
I liked how the novel combines medieval conflict with supernatural horror. The tension between kingdoms gives the story political stakes, while Willie's personal transformation gives it emotional stakes. That combination makes the book feel bigger than a simple werewolf tale. I also enjoyed how the curse is treated as something painful and tragic, not just exciting or violent. The Pack members have a history and a code, and that makes them compelling. Willie's hatred of them is understandable, but the reader slowly begins to see that the truth is more complicated. That is good storytelling.
L
Lucía Navarro
Lima, Peru
Vol I · The Pack
A story about trauma, belonging, and meaning
The strongest part of The Pack is its emotional transformation. Willie is not only bitten; he is forced into a new identity. That makes the story more than an adventure. It becomes a story about trauma, fear, belonging, and the search for meaning after life changes suddenly. I also liked the contrast between the farm, which represents ordinary life, and Sanctuary, which represents exile and hidden truth. The Oddities were especially interesting because they add another layer to the theme of outsiders surviving together.
J
Javier Morales
Santiago, Chile
Vol I · The Pack
Expands the werewolf genre with depth and moral ambiguity
This book impressed me because it respects the werewolf genre while also expanding it. The Pack is not just a group of monsters; they are part of a larger world with rules, hierarchy, history, and suffering. The lunar cycle gives the story structure and suspense, and the medieval setting makes the danger feel raw. Willie's first encounter with the Pack is intense, but what stayed with me more was what happened after — his confusion, anger, and gradual exposure to a world he never knew existed. I also liked the moral ambiguity around Woodrow and Lord Victor. The story makes the reader question who truly has power and who is trapped by it.
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