Shifters dominate paranormal romance. Werewolf romance that actually delivers on the premise? Surprisingly rare. Why? Most authors give their heroes enhanced strength and golden eyes, throw in some territorial growling, and call it werewolf romance. They haven't written werewolf romance. They've written romance with cosmetic fur. Real werewolf romance grapples with living in two skins. It explores the terror and exhilaration of losing human form. It examines pack bonds that demand loyalty while human hearts crave independence. It portrays lovers navigating instincts that don't align with human morality—territorial urges, hunting drives, hierarchies that chafe against modern values. And getting it right is challenging. The full moon can't just be set dressing. Transformation can't be painless shapeshifting without consequence. Mate bonds can't erase the need for actual relationship development. Pack structure can't be an excuse for controlling behavior dressed up as romance. Alpha dominance can't be shorthand for "asshole who gets away with it because werewolf." This guide shows you the way. • Crafting transformation scenes that feel visceral and meaningful • Building pack hierarchies that generate conflict, not just backdrop • Writing mate bonds that complicate rather than simplify romance • Drawing the line between protective instinct and abusive control • Navigating intimacy when instinct overrides human choice • Carving out fresh territory in an oversaturated market Write the Bite series: Book 4.