Digital ARC received from publisher through netGalley.
[synopsis from Goodreads]
I still hadn't fully absorbed the terrible possibility that I might actually be a werewolf. A werewolf. I kept stumbling over that word; it made no sense to me. How could I be a werewolf? Werewolves didn't exist.The crew from the Reformed Vampire Support Group is back and this time they are helping werewolves like Reuben.
When Tobias Richard Vandevelde wakes up in hospital with no memory of the night before, his horrified mother tells him that he was found by the police. At Featherdale Park. In a dingo pen.
As if that isn't weird enough, suddenly a very menacing looking guy and a priest show up at his door.
As the mystery unfolds, Toby finds himself keeping company with some very strange and sickly looking people - members of a suburban vampire support group. And when he's abducted in broad daylight, he will need all their help to break free ... and to come to terms with his own incredibly rare condition.
13 year old Toby awakes up one morning in a hospital after being found in a dingo pen and Toby has no idea how he got in the dingo pen and then the hospital. This starts a hole series of events leading him to the Reuben and Father Ramos. Needless to say Toby ends up being kidnapped and ends up in the same facility that Reuben had been held in before the Reformed Vampire Support Group busted him out of there. There Toby meets another werewolf who has been held there for 5 months, Sergio and together they must figure out how to escape this facility.
Overall I enjoyed this novel. For me there wasn't as much humor as there had been in the companion book, but this one was filled with plenty of action which worked for me. If you are looking for a book unlike Twilight and other vampire werewolf books pick this one up and enjoy. My only gripe about the book was near the end a zombie thread is introduced and I'm not sure I how I liked that, since I would guess that it is a set up for the next book but that is my opinion. Other than that this was a good read, recommended

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