


The Cloverleah Pack (Now finished with thirteen full novels and two short story books) Now with more than eighty books under my belt, I have no plans to stop spreading the love my wonderful characters deserve. I recently celebrated my eighth year anniversary of the release of my first MM paranormal book, The Reluctant Wolf, and absolutely love my characters and the wonderful readers who support me. If these things don't interest you then please don't buy this book.My name is Lisa Oliver and welcome to my Amazon Author page. It includes graphic depictions of sexual acts between men, some violence and coarse language. Warnings: This book is is a love story between gay male shifters. Add in a serial killer who is making inroads into the gay population and a possible shifter involvement, and Shane and Dimitri have a lot of things to overcome before they get their HEA. But years later, he searched for that pretty boy, now all grown up, with a completely different mission in mind.īeing fated mates was hard enough, but when one man is straight and the other one has no reason to trust, then sparks are bound to fly. Two years older and from the same pack, Dimitri had made it his teenage mission to bring as much pain and humiliation to pretty-boy Shane as possible. Until Dimitri Polst was assigned as his new partner.Ĭonfirmed ladies man, Dimitri Polst knew Shane from before he'd ever shifted into his wolf form. Gay from the first day he'd shifted, he also expected to live his long life alone, and provided it meant that he didn't have to come into contact with any of his ex-pack, he told himself he was happy. His enhanced senses helped him do his job efficiently and he prided himself on keeping control of his animal instincts. Shane West was used to being the only wolf shifter at the Stockton Police Department. 49,000 words have been added to make this into the book my characters wanted it to be. The first 20,000 words of this story were published as a free read for the Goodreads MMRomance Group Love's Landscapes Project.
