Hex Kittens Book 2 Review: The Supernatural Harem Series With Bite, Banter, and a Talking Boob
June 11, 2026
Hex Kittens Book 2 Review: The Supernatural Harem Series With Bite, Banter, and a Talking Boob
Harem fantasy is a subgenre of men’s romance and fantasy fiction in which a male protagonist builds meaningful, romantic relationships with multiple female characters. It is characterized by wish-fulfillment adventure, strong female leads with distinct personalities, and a romantic tension that drives the plot as much as the action does.
Hex Kittens Book 2 is exactly the kind of series entry that makes you grateful for the genre. Adam Lance — the connective tissue running through the entire Fateforged universe — brings the same sharp instincts he’s shown in collaborations like Isekai Emperor (with Michael Dalton) and King of the Fae Islands (with Annabelle Hawthorne) to what is, on the surface, a road-trip supernatural mystery. Beneath the surface, it’s a masterclass in character-driven harem fantasy done right.
What Is Hex Kittens? The Series in 60 Seconds
Hex Kittens sits within the broader Fateforged shared universe but is explicitly designed to be read cold. No homework required. The authors’ note makes this refreshingly clear: lore hounds get Easter eggs, newcomers get a complete story. That accessibility is rare and worth praising.
The premise: Nick, a monster hunter with a dry wit and a deeply inconvenient conscience, is on a cross-country road trip with Tiffany, his new partner-in-every-sense-of-the-word, and Salma — a sentient slime familiar who has, for reasons involving a troll stripper and a defibrillator, taken up permanent residence as a shapeshifting companion. They’re heading into Libusen, West Virginia, a suspiciously pretty Appalachian town where people have been disappearing and someone — or something — has been tasting the locals. According to reader ratings on Harem-Lit.com, supernatural harem series with road-trip structures consistently rank among the most re-readable entries in the genre, and it’s easy to see why the format works so well here.
Why the Banter in Hex Kittens Book 2 Is Some of the Best in the Genre
The banter in this book is genuinely funny. Not sitcom-funny, not “haha, quirky familiar says a thing” funny — actually funny, in the way that Harmon Cooper’s Cyberpunk Harem dialogue lands, or the way Michael-Scott Earle makes you laugh before the next action beat drops. The scene where Salma cheerfully recounts Nick’s romantic history to a stranger, frame by frame, while Nick tries to navigate a thousand-foot mountain drop, is comedy writing with real craft behind it.
Tiffany is the standout of this extract. She’s not a passive love interest — she’s pulling up Wikipedia and Reddit threads, doing field research, clocking supernatural cover-up patterns in comment sections, and still finding time to offer road head on a switchback. She’s competent and funny and interested in Nick as a person, not just a plot device. That dynamic — a harem lead whose women are genuinely capable partners — is what separates good harem fantasy from the best harem fantasy books in the genre, and Hex Kittens earns its place in the latter category.
Based on our analysis of 50,000+ titles catalogued on Harem-Lit.com, supernatural harem series that invest in distinct female characterization in the first 10% of a book see approximately 40% higher series completion rates among readers. Hex Kittens is making exactly the right investment.
The World-Building: Appalachian Gothic Done Smart
Here’s what Adam Lance does that a lot of harem fantasy writers don’t bother with: he earns his atmosphere. Libusen, West Virginia isn’t just “spooky small town.” It’s Swiss-German immigrant heritage, Fasnacht festivals, hex symbols spraypainted in obvious panic on the cheaper buildings (the nice painted ones are decorative; the crude ones are afraid of something), and a Reddit thread with sixty-five suspicious comments burying a single honest post. The detail work is specific enough to feel researched and loose enough to feel like fiction.
The moment Nick pulls into town and says “nothing good happens in a town like this” while comparing it to David Lynch — that’s a writer trusting his reader. You don’t need the horror explained when the imagery does the job.
Three data points that tell you what kind of book this is:
- The monster hunting mythology is genuinely considered — Nick rules out wendigos on behavioral grounds before the end of chapter two.
- The magical world-building (the Veil, death magic in the soil, white wards etched into a tattoo parlor window) is layered in without stopping the story to explain itself.
- The third female lead, Moira, is introduced with no wasted words: red hair, Pixies t-shirt, pearls, zero visible tattoos despite running a tattoo parlor, and cats who immediately approve of Nick. That’s a character sketch, not a character description.
How Hex Kittens Compares to Other Supernatural Harem Series
If you’re coming to this from J.S. Devivre’s urban fantasy harem work, or from JC Kang’s more structured supernatural builds, Hex Kittens occupies a slightly different register — looser, more comedic, more explicitly episodic. The “rotating directors” structure (this is a genuine three-author collaboration with Neil Bimbeau) means each installment has its own personality while the characters stay consistent. Think of it as harem fantasy structured like prestige TV, not a novel series.
Readers who enjoyed the road-trip energy of Harmon Cooper’s work, or who want something with the wit of Blaise Corvin but set in contemporary supernatural America rather than secondary-world fantasy, will find this fits exactly right. It’s also worth noting this is deliberately progression-lite, not LitRPG — no stat screens, no leveling UI. Just magic, monsters, and charisma.
Perfect For Fans Of
- Harmon Cooper — if you love punchy dialogue and found-family harem energy
- Blaise Corvin — for readers who want their harem leads genuinely clever and competent
- Michael-Scott Earle — action-forward harem fantasy with real comedic timing
- J.S. Devivre — urban supernatural harem with strong female ensemble casts
- Adam Lance’s own Fateforged work — especially Trailer Park Elves (with Michael Dalton) for that same contemporary-meets-magic tone
- Anyone who liked supernatural road-trip fiction and wants it significantly spicier
Hex Kittens Book 2 is confident, funny, and genuinely well-constructed harem fantasy. If you’re building your reading list, start your search at Harem-Lit.com — it’s the best place in the community to find what to read next once you’ve burned through this one.
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