Doe and the Wolf
Furry United Coalition • Book 5
by Eve Langlais
Why You'll Love This
A wolf hunting a doe sounds like a setup — until she's the one making him question everything he thought he wanted.
- Great if you want: a quick, fun shifter romance with a chase-to-lovers arc
- The experience: breezy and fast-paced — reads in a single sitting easily
- The writing: Langlais keeps it light and playful, leaning into genre tropes with a wink
- Skip if: you want deep worldbuilding or slow emotional development
About This Book
When a wolf takes a bounty job, he expects to chase, catch, and collect. He doesn't expect to catch feelings. In Doe and the Wolf, Eve Langlais flips the predator-prey dynamic on its head, pairing a lone-wolf bounty hunter with a genetically altered doe who has every reason not to trust him — and plenty of reasons to anyway. The tension between instinct and emotion, between running and staying, gives the romance real stakes beyond the physical. Dawn isn't a passive heroine waiting to be saved; she's someone actively weighing the cost of trust after it's already been weaponized against her.
Langlais writes paranormal romance with a breezy, confident voice that keeps pages turning without sacrificing emotional weight. At 185 pages, Doe and the Wolf moves fast and wastes nothing — the banter crackles, the heat is earned, and the world-building of the Furry United Coalition universe layers in naturally rather than slowing things down. Readers new to the series can step in here without feeling lost, while returning fans get the satisfaction of a mythology deepening in unexpected directions. It's compact storytelling done with real control.