![]() | Unhinged Alphas (Ghost Alpha Unit, #2) by Lenore Rosewood ★★★★☆ Read: January 25, 2026 572 pages |
Unhinged Alphas picks up right where Feral Omega left off and then cranks everything darker. We are still in omegaverse territory with one feral omega, her pack of lethal alphas and a corrupt system that sees them all as tools. This book leans much more into the dystopian side of the world, with labs, experiments and government games, so it feels heavier and grittier than book one.
My heart completely belongs to Plague and Wraith in this one. Plague is still the calm in the storm, the medic who pretends he does not care but absolutely does. Every time he drops that controlled exterior and turns into a filthy, focused alpha, I melt. Wraith’s arc just wrecked me. He is nonverbal, scarred and treated like an object by the people who created him, but he will literally endure anything if it means getting one more chance to protect Ivy. There is so much devotion and heartbreak in the way he moves through this book and I loved him even more for it. Ivy herself grows a lot. She is still prickly, stubborn and desperate for freedom, but she starts fighting back harder and showing real compassion toward the other “monsters” around her. She feels less like a victim and more like someone actively choosing who she is going to be.
Valek is where my feelings get complicated. I loved him in book one, but here he makes some choices that rubbed hard against my personal lines around consent and control. It is clear he believes he is doing the right thing and the author keeps him in that morally gray space rather than turning him into a pure villain, but I am not rooting for him romantically the way I was. I am still fascinated by him as a character, just wary now.
The worldbuilding takes a big step forward with more of the lab program revealed, more players introduced and the sense that this conflict is much larger than one pack and one omega. The downside is that the ending is very much “middle of the arc.” Nothing is neatly resolved, the pack is scattered and Ivy is not safely home when the book stops, so you close it feeling wrung out and very ready for the next installment.
If you like dark omegaverse with found family packs, traumatised lab rats, a feral omega who refuses to be tamed and alphas who are as broken as they are devoted, this is an intense and addictive read. Just be aware of heavy themes like captivity, medical experimentation and non consensual drugging and go in knowing you are signing up for a multi book journey, not a tidy ending here.
