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Very cool!
I like your backstory a lot. The curse God placed on them for their sin, and the interesting and unexpected form of redemption (at least, from the physical and mental aspects of the curse) offered to the children later. You can almost see a sort of exile theme there. Your description of the different forms the WereWolves can take is very illuminating. I have a bunch of questions/suggestions. Forgive me if there's a lot, these are just the things that occurred to me, reading your excellent description.
Thank you! Yes, I like it too!

I didn't know so much about their history before I wrote that post! Yeah and that redemption theme was what I was going for, hence my wording: "The WereWolves were born!" 'born' as in a new type of creature, just like we become new creatures in Christ!
Don't worry about asking questions, even if a lot of them! I like answering them, it helps me to develop the thing the questions are about, and shows that you are interested! Thanks for asking questions! Now to answer them... *enlarges the 'post a reply' window sort of like rolling up sleeves in preparation for a large task*
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1. I understand that the Werewolves (lower case deliberate here) would essentially lose their minds when they transformed, or at least from a human point of view. What about the WereWolves in wolf form? Is their human thinking fully intact, but just tweaked a bit by wolfish instincts? Or are they just wolf-minded, but a bit smarter and more friendly? Somewhere in between?
Hmm, yes, the WereWolves are still fully human in the mental department, but tweaked a bit by wolfish instincts, possibly wolfish desires (maybe a more ravenous appetite, but if they gorge themselves and switch back to human, their liable to get sick) as well as just subtle differences caused by extremely sharp hearing and sense of smell. Many of the wolves in Vadra are actually sentient beings, so these wolf-shaped humans would be a lot like them, but with more humanly influenced thinking (I'll have to think about how that 'takes shape' (pun intended

), if you have ideas/suggestions, I'm open to hearing them!).
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2. Somewhat related: for the Wolfman form, where does the clear thinking/wisdom come from? Is it human reasoning combined with the strong (spiritual?) instincts of a wolf? A canine sense of loyalty and ability to detect intentions, and resistance to intimidation?
Yes, those ideas of how that would come about are quite good.

I think that it is because wolves and humans think differently, know different things and have different abilities, and in Wolfman form, they have a near-perfect balance of the two sets of abilities/perspectives, so they can, say, fight like a wolf (using teeth and claws) and also grasp a specially shaped dagger and fight similarly to humans. You can see how this could give them an advantage over either humans or wolves, and this sort of 'balance between the two natures extends to the spiritual and mental levels as well. They also can view the world the way a wolf does and the way a human does at the same time. I don't mean that their entire personality changes, but more subtle than that, sort of like the assumptions we make without knowing it, they are hard to see (especially for us), but they have a huge impact on how we think (man it's going to be hard to get that to take shape, too!). Does that make sense?
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3. Why does a Nothlit (Animorph lingo for being stuck in a form from staying in it too long
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nothlit) Wolfman revert to wolf, instead of just staying Wolfman? (Meaning your intentions for the world as opposed to a physical mechanism. It sounds like you don't want there to be permanent Wolfmen; just curious as to why)
Right, well, I guess because though God gave the WereWolves the ability to be wolf-shaped, and wolfmen, he wants them to continue to be humans, he does not want them to try and stay wolfmen for their entire lives, thus developing an identity in that shape. But I do think they should be able to stay in that form for a long time without consequence. I might just leave that 'rule' out until a WereWolf 'falls away' and stays in wolfman form for the sake of becoming more powerful, and leaving his human form for dead, seeking a new, 'better' identity. To look at this from another angle, Wolfman form is like being high (as in, drunk with) intelligence, physical strength, and spiritual fluentness (I'm not sure how this will take shape yet, maybe they will have some 'wolfish sixth sense' and mind control or something), it is good as a tool, and even is acceptable to assume this form for years on end (though I wouldn't want to be the guy that had to go through almost an hour of convulsions and excruciating pain to change form after that), but it is wrong to sacrifice the human form because it is their original form,
it is what they are. So reverting permanently to wolf form would be like God again saying "you want to be a wolf, do you? So be it!", similarly to how Ginger the cat loses his ability to speak in Narnia, The Last Battle. I hope that makes sense, phew, you're good at asking tough questions that make me think!
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4. If a WereWolf stays human to the point where transformation is essentially impossible, is it essentially a human again? Would it eventually shed its fur "clothing" and need to wear normal clothing again, and develop table manners?
I don't think they are able to lose their ability to shapeshift from human form like they can lose the ability to shapeshift
to human form. However, it get's very painful, and time consuming if not done regularly. Hopefully telling you about this WereWolf I've thought about will help you: He lived in a time when WereWolves were still being hunted alongside Were-wolves (there I put the hyphen so it's easier to see the difference). It wouldn't have been hard for him to find a haven where others of his kind are holed up, except that at first he is injured by a Were-wolf hunter, and can't escape and take care of himself. So in order to survive in a human village, he remains in human form, wearing normal clothes and hiding his wolf-hair garments, and making sure no one sees his WereWolf charm (the little symbol they use to show others of their kind that they are WereWolves as well), he ends up staying in human form 24/7 (if that's how time is structured there, I'm not sure yet) because he is too scared of being caught in another form and being killed. This lasts for, I don't know, let's say ten years, and as time goes on, the WereWolves have mustered forces and are declaring war, people are starting to suspect the strange man that tries to suppress grunting noises at the table really
is a Were-wolf after all, and the refugee WereWolf is in a pretty bad spot. But then he finally makes up his mind, locks himself into his room, and with all his might, shapeshifts into wolfman form in only twenty minutes (the short time is due to extreme will power and strength of mind, sort of like strong muscles make it so you can lift something easier, and the fact that he was only shifting into wolfman, so it only took half as long). But the pain is so excruciating that he screams near the end, and just barely manages to escape getting killed in his room. Then the main force of WereWolves attack at that moment, and our WereWolf friend is happily reunited with his kins(wolf)men after the battle. I hope that rambling achieved something...
In short, WereWolves don't lose the ability to shapeshift, but it gets harder, more painful, and more time consuming as time goes on if they don't do it regularly.
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5. What about the children of a WereWolf and a human? Are they impossible? Are they some kind of hybrid? Does the species of the mother determine it? Perhaps the transformation of a pregnant mother conveys WereWolfhood onto an otherwise human child? This would result in a serious choice for a mother WereWolf, since it sounds like 9 months of not transforming into a wolf would probably leave her stuck, in return for having a human child.
I'm not sure, it probably wouldn't happen often because of cultural differences (human woman don't appreciate grunting at the table! lol). I think it could happen though, just like people from different cultures can get married in real life, the cultural differences would just be difficult, and make things interesting. I think the possibilities are: the child is not able to take wolf form, the child is able to cultivate the ability, but it is very difficult at first and takes years to achieve, or the child is able to shapeshift with ease just like a full WereWolf.
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6. Do Werewolves still exist, alongside WereWolves? (I imagine the two peoples would probably not have the best relations, lol...)
Right! the WereWolves and Were-wolves are both few in number compared to humans, at least for awhile, due to being hunted almost to extinction, but both of them survive, and are almost constantly at war with eachother.
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7. (bit of a suggestion) If both species do coexist, do the WereWolves have a name for themselves, in whatever language they use? Having capitalization as the only distinction could be confusing, especially in verbal communication.
I know, I was thinking about that too. Also languages are probably the least developed portion of my world. I think they speak a similar language to humans, and can speak with the friendlier races of humans with ease. To answer the question, I'm not sure yet, but I might just have them call the Were-wolves (the evil race) The Wer (pronounced wear) which could have similarities to both the word for man, and their word for wanderer, as in, those that are lost, going the wrong way, etc. Right now, the hyphenated (Were-wolves) ones are the evil ones, while the dual-capitalized ones are the good ones.
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All in all, neat stuff!

Thank you! I'm sure it'll all be even better for your questions! Your questions really helped me think them through more in ways I hadn't thought too. Hopefully you'll be able to meet them someday (I mean, hopefully you get to meet the good ones)!