FictionDB
Dead Until Dark

  • # of Titles:
    13 main books + 11 short stories
  • First Book:
    Dead Until Dark (May 2001)
  • Latest Book:
    After Dead: What Came Next in the World of Sookie Stackhouse (Book 13.5) (November 2013)
  • Genres:
    Urban Fantasy
  • Series Rating:
  • Reading Order:

    🔄 Best Read in Order · Start with Book 1: Dead Until Dark

  • Connect:
  • Share:
What's New?

Join the FictionDB email list to get access to the latest news and exclusive content.

The Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse Books in Order (24 Books)

Order Book Date Rating
1 5
2 5
3 5
4 5
4.33 (ss) 4
4.66 (ss) 4
5 5
5.5 (ss) 4
6 5


7 5
7.5 (ss) 4
8 5
8.5 (ss) 4
9 5
9.33 (ss) 3.5
9.66 (ss) 4
10 5
10.5 4
11 4
11.5 (ss) 4.5
12 4
12.5 (ss) 5
13 4
13.5 3

Series Premise

The series is set in an alternate present where supernatural beings—vampires first, followed by werewolves, shapeshifters, fairies, witches, and more—have revealed themselves to humanity in recent years. Vampires, thanks to the invention of Tru Blood (a synthetic substitute), no longer need to hunt humans and can integrate into society, though prejudice, legal battles, and violence persist. Into this world steps Sookie Stackhouse, a telepathic barmaid in the tiny rural town of Bon Temps, Louisiana. Able to read minds since childhood, Sookie has always felt like an outsider, masking her ability to avoid being labeled "crazy." Her life changes dramatically when she meets Bill Compton, a vampire whose mind she cannot read—a rare relief that sparks her first romantic entanglement.

The core premise follows Sookie as she becomes increasingly entangled in supernatural affairs, solving murders, navigating political intrigue among vampire factions, and uncovering secrets about her own heritage. Each book features a central mystery—often a murder or disappearance—that pulls Sookie into danger, usually involving her romantic interests, family, or the bar where she works. Over the arc, her telepathy draws her deeper into the hidden supernatural world: vampire politics in Louisiana's Area 5, werewolf packs, fairy courts, witch covens, and ancient grudges. A major thread reveals Sookie's part-fairy ancestry, explaining her abilities and making her a target for powerful beings. The overarching story traces her growth from a small-town waitress seeking normalcy to a woman embracing her uniqueness, forging alliances, facing betrayals, and ultimately choosing her path amid escalating threats. Themes include prejudice, identity, loyalty, the cost of power, and the blurred line between human and monster.



The Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse Series Characters

Sookie Stackhouse is the heart of the series: a pretty, blonde, blue-eyed woman in her mid-20s (at the start), telepathic, kind-hearted, and fiercely independent. Raised by her grandmother after losing her parents, she values family, loyalty, and doing the right thing, even when it endangers her. Her inability to read vampire minds makes them intriguing; her fairy blood later explains much about her appeal and powers.



Bill Compton, a Civil War-era vampire, is Sookie's first love—courtly, protective, but secretive and tied to vampire politics as Area 5 investigator.



Eric Northman, the charismatic, ancient Viking vampire sheriff of Area 5, becomes a major romantic and political force—tall, blond, ruthless yet honorable in his way, with a magnetic pull on Sookie.



Other key figures include:



- Jason Stackhouse: Sookie's handsome, impulsive brother, often in trouble.

- Sam Merlotte: Sookie's boss and friend, a shapeshifter who owns Merlotte's.

- Tara Thornton: Sookie's loyal but troubled best friend.

- Alcide Herveaux: A reliable werewolf with romantic potential.

- Pam: Eric's loyal, sarcastic vampire child.

- Various supernatural leaders, villains, and allies (fairy relatives like Niall, witches like Amelia Broadway, etc.) who populate the expanding world.

Setting of the The Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse Series

The primary setting is Bon Temps, a fictional small town in northwestern Louisiana, evoking the humid, slow-paced Deep South with its mix of charm and insularity. Think pine forests, bayous, dirt roads, shotgun houses, and the sticky heat of summer. Merlotte's Bar & Grill, where Sookie waitresses, serves as a central hub— a down-home spot with jukebox music, cold beer, and gossip where humans and supernaturals mingle uneasily.



The world expands beyond Bon Temps: vampire bars in Shreveport, werewolf territories, fairy realms accessed through hidden portals, New Orleans for political summits, and occasional trips to Dallas, Mississippi, or fairy dimensions. The Louisiana backdrop infuses Southern Gothic vibes—decaying plantations, family secrets, religious undercurrents, racial and class tensions mirrored in human-supernatural dynamics. Contemporary pop culture references ground the alternate history, while supernatural elements add a layer of otherworldly danger to everyday Southern life. The setting feels lived-in and authentic, with Harris capturing regional dialect, food (sweet tea, fried food), and community dynamics vividly.

Tone & Themes of the The Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse Series

The tone is lively, witty, and irreverent, with a strong Southern voice that mixes humor, sensuality, and darkness. Sookie's first-person narration is conversational, sarcastic, and endearingly honest—full of folksy expressions, internal monologues about manners, relationships, and the absurdities of her life. The books are fast-paced and entertaining, blending cozy mystery elements with steamy romance and graphic action.

Expect plenty of snappy dialogue, cheeky observations about small-town life, and lighthearted moments amid peril—Sookie's dry wit and resilience keep things from becoming too grim. Romance is explicit and passionate, often featuring alpha supernatural males, but it's balanced by Sookie's independence and moral compass. Violence appears regularly (fights, murders, supernatural battles), but it's not gratuitous; it's tied to plot and character consequences. The tone evolves slightly over the series—early books lean more mystery-romance, later ones deepen world-building and emotional stakes—but it remains fun, empowering, and escapist, never taking itself too seriously while delivering genuine tension and heartbreak.

The Sookie Stackhouse series remains a landmark in urban fantasy, blending Southern charm, supernatural spectacle, and relatable humanity into an addictive saga. Through Sookie's eyes, readers explore a world where monsters walk among us, prejudice festers, and love crosses impossible boundaries—all delivered with humor, heat, and heart. Charlaine Harris creates a heroine who is flawed, funny, and formidable, growing from a woman hiding her gift to one who owns her power and chooses her future on her terms. Concluding with Dead Ever After, the series offers a definitive, bittersweet resolution that satisfies longtime fans while leaving the door cracked for the imagination. Whether drawn by the mysteries, the romance, the world-building, or Sookie's irresistible voice, the books deliver escapist thrills with emotional depth, cementing their place as a beloved cornerstone of the genre.



Books in this series fall into the following genres

Click on any of the links above to see more series and books in these genres.

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

There are 24 books in the Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse series. The series includes 13 novels and 11 short stories/novellas.

The Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse series does not have a new book coming out soon. The latest book, After Dead: What Came Next in the World of Sookie Stackhouse (Book 13.5), was published in November 2013.

The first book in the Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse series, Dead Until Dark, was published in May 2001.

The Southern Vampire Mystery / Sookie Stackhouse series primarily falls into the Urban Fantasy genre.

Top Series in Urban Fantasy

No ads, please...
$25 / year

FictionDB Premium Membership

Subscribe