4 Answers2026-07-08 04:33:48
Okay, so digging into 'Gideon' (I'm assuming you mean the one by Alex Gordon, the supernatural thriller with the werewolf element) is a bit of a trip because the main cast isn't huge, but they're all twisted up in this dark family history. The absolute core is Lauren Reardon, who returns to her creepy hometown of Gideon after her father's death and gets hit with the realization that her family legacy is... well, pretty monstrous. She's the lens we see everything through, trying to piece together these horrific secrets.
Then there's the mysterious figure who calls himself 'the Hunter' – he's the Gideon werewolf, the ancient entity bound to the land and the Reardon bloodline. He's less a traditional character and more a force of nature and vengeance, but his interactions with Lauren drive the whole plot. You also can't skip Matthew Lytton, the local deputy who tries to help Lauren navigate the town's hostility and ends up way in over his head. The antagonistic presence is largely the townsfolk themselves, especially figures like Malachi and the closed-off community that guards Gideon's secrets. The key dynamic is really between Lauren and the Hunter, this push and pull of heritage versus self-determination.
4 Answers2026-07-08 01:20:21
Okay, this is where 'Gideon' lost me a bit, honestly. It sets up this whole pack structure and moon-based power system, which is fine, but then it gets weirdly bureaucratic? Like, the main conflict isn't about the primal hunt or territory wars you see in most werewolf stuff; it's about Gideon navigating pack law and political succession. The mythology feels less like exploring the curse of the beast and more like a supernatural courtroom drama with fur. The actual transformation scenes are almost clinical. I kept waiting for that raw, uncontrollable rage, but Gideon's control is too perfect. It strips away the danger, for me.
Maybe that's the point—showing a werewolf who's mastered his condition rather than being a victim of it. But as a mythology deep dive, it sidelines the traditional lore about silver, wolfsbane, and the struggle with humanity. It's more interested in the societal mechanics of a hidden supernatural community. Interesting angle, but not what I pick up a werewolf book hoping to find.
4 Answers2026-07-08 01:50:44
I’ve read both 'Gideon' and 'Gideon the Ninth' and the confusion is totally understandable. I think the original asker might be mixing up the 1970 novel 'Gideon' by Gordon R. Dickson with Tamsyn Muir's 'Gideon the Ninth.' There's no 'Gideon Werewolf' book as a distinct title. If we're talking about Gideon from Muir's series, no, he's not a werewolf. The series is sci-fi fantasy with necromancy, not lycanthropy. It’s a standalone story? Absolutely not. 'Gideon the Ninth' is just the explosive first entry in 'The Locked Tomb' series. You've got 'Harrow the Ninth,' 'Nona the Ninth,' and 'Alecto the Ninth' upcoming. So, yeah, it’s very much a series, and a deeply interconnected one at that. You can't really stop after book one.
Muir plants so many seeds in the first book that only make sense two installments later. Jumping in thinking it's standalone would leave you with a million questions and a desperate need for the next book. I made that mistake and immediately had to buy 'Harrow.' The series format is essential for the full, mind-bending payoff.
4 Answers2026-07-08 01:10:26
I was hunting for 'Gideon the Ninth' audio for ages, honestly. The lesbian necromancers in space tagline hooked me, but finding a legit copy was weirdly tough. I ended up getting it through Audible—it's the main place that has Tamsyn Muir's Locked Tomb series narrated by Moira Quirk, who is absolutely perfect for Harrow's voice.
Sometimes Libby or Hoopla through your library might have it, but the waitlists can be long. I'd avoid random YouTube uploads; the audio quality is usually terrible and it's a disservice to the experience. The way Quirk handles Gideon's swagger and the bone magic terminology is half the reason I even finished the book.