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Monday, June 29, 2026

Review: Feral Omega (Ghost Alpha Unit, #1) by Lenore Rosewood

Feral Omega (Ghost Alpha Unit, #1)

Feral Omega (Ghost Alpha Unit, #1)

by Lenore Rosewood

★★★★☆

Read: January 16, 2026

382 pages


Feral Omega drops you into a brutal post-apocalyptic omegaverse where betas run the show, alphas are weaponised, and omegas are treated like property. Ivy is a feral, deeply traumatised omega who has survived a “correction” centre that is anything but corrective, and she’s handed over to a misfit alpha strike team called the Ghosts as a last resort. From there the book becomes a mix of dark, violent worldbuilding and very intense hurt/comfort, as this pack of broken men slowly re-orient their lives around the one girl they were never supposed to care about.

Tropes wise, this is why-choose omegaverse with found family, damaged antiheroes, feral heroine, forced proximity, and heavy trauma recovery baked into the romance. The Ghosts are essentially a suicide squad: a haunted leader who is trying very hard to do the right thing, a masked medic with ice in his veins and way too much control, a pretty boy with a big mouth and a bigger heart, a charming little psycho with a violent streak, and one hulking “monster” everyone is half afraid of. Watching each of them soften, in their own reluctant way, as Ivy claws her way back from survival mode was my favourite part of the book. My top moments were almost all built around Plague and the boys, especially when their hostility or banter cracked open into something a lot more charged.
Ivy herself is easy to root for. She is stubborn, feral, and understandably wary of every alpha in a world that has only ever used her. This is not a sunshine heroine. She bites first, she runs when she can, and every scrap of trust she gives the Ghosts feels earned. The story never forgets what she has been through, and when things finally turn from survival to pleasure, it feels like a reclaiming rather than a gloss over.

I landed at four stars. I loved the pack, I loved Ivy’s spine, and I loved the way some of the intimate moments were used to rewrite her history with touch and heat, but a few emotional beats felt a little rushed for me, like the trauma curve and the sexual escalation were not always perfectly aligned. That said, the character dynamics completely hooked me, especially the tension between certain alphas, and the quiet ache wrapped around the one everyone treats like a monster. I closed the book feeling satisfied with the arc we got and very curious to see how their bond and the wider conspiracy evolve in book two.

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Hey, I'm Tynga! Montreal-based mom of two and lifelong book lover. I started this blog in 2009 reviewing PNR and UF, and over the years my shelves expanded into Romantasy, Dark Romance, and Dark Rom-Com. This blog is the archive. These days, my bookish life lives mostly on TikTok. I also create reading journals through Tynga Publishing — designed by a reader, for readers.

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