A review by booksafety
Becoming Daddy Wolf by Tia Fielding

4.0

ARC review
3.5 stars, rounded up.

Book safety, tropes and tags down below.

I have to say, I really liked the world the author has created with this one. Of course there was a lot of character introductions, considering it's the first book in the series, but that's to be expected. I'll likely read the next book as well. The author did a good job making you interested in the side characters without completely overwhelming you with information.

As for this book specifically, I was highly intrigued by the blurb. Arie has been crushing on his boss Ren for two years. Unbeknownst to Arie, they are actually fated mates, which Ren has kept secret. I do wish we got a better explanation as to why it was kept a secret, but I thought their eventual friendship and relationship was very sweet, and the fact that Arie gave Ren a bit of a hard time over it made up for a lot of it.

The book starts with Ren having gone through something highly traumatic, and our MCs start building a closer friendship when Arie supports Ren while he works through some of his trauma. I commend the author for making this a slow process, including some rough moments and therapy. Absolutely no magic d*ck in sight, people! Speaking of d*ck, this is a slooow burn (we're talking the 90th percentile here folks). BUT, when we finally got down and dirty, it was very good. We even got some surprise knottage, which I'm always here for.

One of my favorite moments was very early on when Arie cuddles Ren while he's in wolf form (oh, he's a wolf shifter, I guess I forgot to mention that), and it was very cute. More of that in the next book, please! We got some other cute and funny moments too:

"For a few seconds I was sure he would throw the fruit at me, but instead, he turned the glare to my direction, before pointedly chomping on the banana in a way that made my c*ck want to crawl inside my body. Point taken."

"'Can I get the kisses first, and the good pain pills second?' Very, very quietly he added, 'I don't wanna miss the kisses."

"'What did Daddy just say?' he asked sharply. 'I dunno, maybe Daddy should stop talking about himself in third person and-ow!' This smack was much harder."


I enjoyed how even though Ren is the big bad wolf, as well as an alpha, it was Arie that took on the caregiving and supportive role early on in the book, even though he's *only* human. Arie and his brother had a fallout with the rest of their family, partially because of speciesism, so it was nice to see the MCs being equals. This only strengthened their eventual Daddy/boy dynamic, in my opinion. When Ren eventually assumed the Daddy role, we understood why that made sense for him, and because we've seen them being equals, the power exchange felt authentic, and like something they both wanted, not just needed. I love Daddy/boy, but if you don't, I will say it was pretty mild overall.

Unfortunately, this book did have what might be my biggest pet peeve: no character descriptions. I know Ren is 6 foot 2 inches tall, but that is sadly all we got. I like knowing what the characters look like. We got quite a thorough description of Arie's brother, Leon, so I think we should have gotten one for our MCs as well. Other than that, I was entertained throughout the book, and even though the tropes are familiar, it was done in a way I haven't read before, which was neat!

Book safety
Spoiler
Cheating: No
OM drama: No
Third-act breakup: No
POV: 3rd person, dual
Strict top/bottom or vers: Strict roles (only one scene where this is applicable)


TW/CW
Spoiler
Discipline (corner timeout), violence, murder, blood, hospitalization, PTSD, mental health struggles, stalking of side character, hate crime (beating), homophobia, speciesism, religious bigotry, explicit sexual content


Tropes & tags
Spoiler
Shifter/human, wolf shifter, boss/employee, fated mates, slow burn, friends-to-lovers, knot, Daddy/boy, domestic discipline, workplace family, rock star brother, hurt/comfort, caretaking