Tom Piccirilli
Shara is an adventuresome, colorful, and compelling horror story that breaks the traditional werewolf rules and offers us a new kind of beast of burden. Here you'll find believable characters, non-stop action, and cliff-hanging suspense that keeps the narrative gears shifting when you least expect it. Wedel's smooth prose is vivid, engaging and sharp as a wolf's claw. (Tom Piccirilli, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Night Class and A Choir of Ill Children)
M. Stephen Lukac
In Shara, Steve Wedel does for werewolves what Joss Whedon and Buffy accomplished with vampires. A modern take on a classical beast, Shara delivers in every way and leaves the reader begging for the next chapter. (M. Stephen Lukac, Author of Oogie Boogie Central and But Then Again, You'll Have This)
Gary A. Braunbeck
A terse, tense literary throwback to the Universal horror films of the '30s and '40s, Shara is that rare commodity among horror novels: a book that manages to be both frightening and fun while breathing new life into one of the genre's oldest tropes. Steven Wedel's rock-solid debut pegs him as a writer to watch. Especially when the moon is full.... (Gary A. Braunbeck, author of the Stoker-nominated Things Left Behind and The Indifference Of Heaven)
Diana Barron
Steven E. Wedel's Shara is thoroughly beguiling. Caught between two worlds, accepted by neither, we accompany Shara on her terrifying, supernatural journey to belong, and indeed to survive the perils and torments that threaten at every turn. Mr. Wedel's beautiful, soul-searching narrative and startling imagery sweep us along with Shara to the thrilling conclusion, and he leaves us breathless. (Diana Barron, author of Stoker-nominated Phantom Feast)