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Charlaine Harris

Author of Dead Until Dark

184+ Works 159,558 Members 5,011 Reviews 581 Favorited

About the Author

Charlaine Harris was born in Tunica, Mississippi on November 25, 1951. She attended Rhodes College in Memphis, Tennessee. She wrote poetry and plays before beginning to publish mysteries set in the American South. She is the author of the Aurora Teagarden Mystery series, the Lily Bard Mystery show more series, the Harper Connelly series, and the Sookie Stackhouse series. In 2001, the first book in the Sookie Stackhouse series, Dead until Dark, won an Anthony Award for Best Paperback Mystery. The series was adapted as a TV show on HBO called True Blood. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: http://www.charlaineharris.com/CharlaineHarris.jpg

Series

Works by Charlaine Harris

Dead Until Dark (2001) 15,751 copies
Living Dead in Dallas (2002) 11,641 copies
Club Dead (2003) 10,649 copies
Dead to the World (2004) 10,258 copies
Dead as a Doornail (2015) 9,669 copies
Definitely Dead (2006) 9,494 copies
All Together Dead (2007) 9,006 copies
From Dead to Worse (2008) 8,529 copies
Dead and Gone (2009) 8,024 copies
Dead in the Family (2002) 6,581 copies
Dead Reckoning (2011) 4,765 copies
Grave Sight (2005) 3,677 copies
Deadlocked (2012) 3,399 copies
A Touch of Dead (2009) 3,151 copies
Grave Surprise (2006) 2,848 copies
Dead Ever After (2013) 2,659 copies
An Ice Cold Grave (2008) 2,477 copies
Real Murders (1990) 2,238 copies
Shakespeare's Landlord (1996) 1,990 copies
Grave Secret (2009) 1,819 copies
Midnight Crossroad (2014) 1,420 copies
Three Bedrooms, One Corpse (1994) 1,406 copies
Many Bloody Returns: Tales of Birthdays With Bite (2007) — Editor — 1,393 copies
Shakespeare's Champion (1997) 1,370 copies
Shakespeare's Trollop (2000) 1,329 copies
Shakespeare's Christmas (1998) 1,298 copies
The Julius House (1995) 1,259 copies
Dead Over Heels (1996) 1,234 copies
Last Scene Alive (2002) 1,210 copies
Shakespeare's Counselor (2001) 1,199 copies
A Fool and His Honey (1999) 1,140 copies
Poppy Done to Death (2003) 1,075 copies
Wolfsbane and Mistletoe (2008) — Editor; Contributor — 930 copies
Day Shift (2015) 898 copies
Death's Excellent Vacation (2010) — Editor; Contributor — 824 copies
Sookie Stackhouse, Books 1-8 (2009) 784 copies
Night Shift (2016) 741 copies
Sweet and Deadly (1981) 699 copies
Sookie Stackhouse, Books 1-7 (2008) 623 copies
An Easy Death (2018) 597 copies
Home Improvement: Undead Edition (2011) — Editor — 571 copies
A Secret Rage (1984) 556 copies
Dead in Dixie (2003) 440 copies
All the Little Liars (2016) 413 copies
An Apple for the Creature (2012) — Editor — 380 copies
Crimes by Moonlight: Mysteries from the Dark Side (2010) — Editor; Contributor — 325 copies
A Longer Fall (2020) 308 copies
Sleep Like a Baby (2017) 298 copies
The Russian Cage (2021) 229 copies
Dead by Day (2005) 212 copies
Games Creatures Play (2014) — Editor — 208 copies
The Pretenders (2014) 204 copies
The Serpent in Heaven (2022) 142 copies
Indigo (2017) 117 copies
All the Dead Shall Weep (2023) 95 copies
Charlaine Harris' Grave Sight Part 1 (2011) — Author — 79 copies
Dancers in the Dark (2010) 71 copies
Inheritance (1867) 62 copies
Haunted (2018) 45 copies
Charlaine Harris' Grave Sight Part 3 (2012) — Author — 29 copies
Gift Wrap [short story] (2010) 28 copies
Playing Possum {collection} (2013) 24 copies
Lucky [short story] (2010) 21 copies
Dead Giveaway {short Story} (2001) 16 copies
Malice Domestic 12: Mystery Most Historical (2017) — Editor — 12 copies
Aurora Teagarden: 6-Movie Collection (2017) — Author — 10 copies
Layla Steps Up (2018) 8 copies
Fairy Dust [short story] (2009) 7 copies
Dig Here (2019) 7 copies
Dead Giveaway 6 copies
Tacky 6 copies
Dark & Dangerous (2008) 5 copies
The One That Got Away (2022) 4 copies
Death by Dahlia (2011) 3 copies
Small-Town Wedding (2012) 3 copies
Tõelised mõrvad (2021) 2 copies
Two Blondes 2 copies
Nightshift 1 copy
Sookie Stackhouse, Books 1-11 (1956) — Author — 1 copy
Texoma 1 copy
Miasteczko Midnight (2019) 1 copy
Martwy dla swiata (2010) 1 copy

Associated Works

Bite (2004) — Contributor — 1,955 copies
My Big Fat Supernatural Wedding (2006) — Contributor — 1,482 copies
Strange Brew (2009) — Contributor — 1,077 copies
Must Love Hellhounds (2009) — Contributor — 900 copies
Blood Lite (2008) — Contributor — 886 copies
Powers of Detection: Stories of Mystery and Fantasy (2004) — Contributor — 526 copies
Down These Strange Streets (2011) — Contributor — 503 copies
Tales from the Folly (2020) — Introduction — 485 copies
Unusual Suspects: Stories of Mystery & Fantasy (2008) — Contributor — 405 copies
MatchUp (2017) — Contributor — 314 copies
Inherit the Dead (2013) — Contributor — 294 copies
Heroic Hearts (2022) — Contributor — 192 copies
Weird Detectives: Recent Investigations (2013) — Contributor — 145 copies
Vampires: The Recent Undead (2011) — Contributor — 133 copies
Unfettered II: New Tales by Masters of Fantasy (2016) — Contributor — 121 copies
Werewolves and Shape Shifters (2010) — Contributor — 107 copies
Dark Duets: All-New Tales of Horror and Dark Fantasy (2014) — Contributor — 101 copies
The Best American Mystery Stories 2018 (2018) — Contributor — 100 copies
The Best American Mystery Stories 2014 (2014) — Contributor — 93 copies
Blood Sisters: Vampire Stories by Women (2015) — Contributor — 76 copies
Seize the Night: New Tales of Vampiric Terror (2015) — Contributor — 71 copies
Urban Allies: Ten Brand-New Collaborative Stories (2016) — Contributor — 57 copies
Delta Blues (2009) — Contributor — 51 copies
Murder, They Wrote (1997) — Contributor — 51 copies
In the Footsteps of Dracula: Tales of the Un-Dead Count (2017) — Contributor — 27 copies
Impossible Monsters (2013) — Contributor — 21 copies
Straight Outta Deadwood (2019) — Contributor — 17 copies
Damn Near Dead 2: Live Noir or Die Trying (2010) — Introduction — 14 copies
Quick Bites: Fiction to Sink Your Teeth Into (2004) — Contributor — 12 copies
Shattering Glass: A Nasty Woman Press Anthology (2020) — Contributor — 8 copies
Blood Sample Box Set (7-in-1) (2010) — Contributor — 7 copies

Tagged

2009 (741) 2010 (501) anthology (1,574) audiobook (505) Aurora Teagarden (598) Charlaine Harris (1,306) ebook (1,535) fairies (477) fantasy (7,181) fiction (9,070) horror (1,610) humor (465) Kindle (840) library (534) Louisiana (1,365) murder (572) mystery (9,549) own (698) paranormal (4,119) paranormal romance (1,615) read (2,585) read in 2009 (461) romance (3,077) series (2,668) shapeshifters (1,428) short stories (1,136) Sookie (761) Sookie Stackhouse (4,169) sookie stackhouse series (484) southern (635) Southern Vampire Mysteries (849) supernatural (2,409) telepathy (628) to-read (5,657) True Blood (704) urban fantasy (3,905) vampire (3,387) vampires (9,166) werewolves (1,996) witches (513)

Common Knowledge

Members

Discussions

Adult fiction mystery woman can sense how you died in Name that Book (September 2015)
Dead After Dark (Sookie Stackhouse 2013) discussion thread in 75 Books Challenge for 2013 (June 2013)

Reviews

Do not know why I keep reading these. Nothing happened in this installment that I couldn't have guessed from the last -- one, two, three? -- books. I must have been insane to pick it up at the library. Somebody slap me if I do it again.
 
Flagged
daplz | 192 other reviews | Apr 7, 2024 |
Dead Until Dark is the first book in Charlaine Harris’s Sookie Stackhouse series. Sookie is an ordinary waitress at a bar in the small town of Bon Temps, Louisiana, but she has the ability (or as she thinks of it “disability”) to read minds. Most of the time, it’s more of a curse than a blessing. Although she’s learned how to put up a guard against other’s thoughts invading her mind, she still can’t always control it very well, which has made dating extremely difficult. Recently vampires “came out of the coffin,” so everyone now knows of their existence. When vampire Bill Compton comes into the bar one night, not only is Sookie physically attracted to him, but all she can hear from him is blessed silence, something that’s very appealing. When she learns that Bill fought in the Civil War, Sookie’s grandmother wants her to ask him to speak at one of her historical society meetings, which leads to the start of a romantic relationship between Bill and Sookie. But there’s a serial killer on the loose who’s been murdering women in the area, and after finding one of the bodies herself and discovering that the women had ties to vampires, Sookie asks Bill to help her do a little investigating. Some of the townsfolk think that Bill or others of his kind might be responsible for the murders, although Sookie is all but certain that isn’t the case. Then her own brother, Jason, who also has ties to all of the women is implicated, but again Sookie is convinced of his innocence. When Bill needs to leave town for a while on business, though, Sookie herself could become the next victim.

Aside from her ability to read minds, Sookie is a pretty ordinary and down-to-earth young woman. Orphaned at a young age, she and Jason were raised by their grandmother, and Sookie still lives with her in the house she grew up in. She works as a waitress at Merlotte’s Bar and Grill, where she’s made friends with some of her co-workers. However, Sookie’s love life is basically non-existent. She tried going out with guys a few times and found that hearing all her date’s thoughts made it far too awkward, so she’s decided not to date at all. As someone who has a strange ability herself, she’s been somewhat curious about vampires ever since their existence became known. When Bill comes into the bar and she can’t hear any of his thoughts, it’s a real gift. As she gets to know Bill a little more and discovers that he’s having difficulty getting workmen to fix up his house, which happens to be almost nextdoor to Sookie’s, she offers to help. Between that and his speaking engagement at her grandmother’s group, they grow closer and eventually start a romantic relationship, something not everyone in town is thrilled about. When the killer starts picking off women not unlike Sookie, one by one, and Sookie herself appears to be a possible target, Bill makes every effort to keep her safe, but when he has to leave town to secure their future, she could be the next victim. I really liked Sookie. She shows kindness and compassion toward others and is very relatable as the girl next-door type. She’s accepting of Bill and vampires in general, but she’s not foolhardy when it comes to the danger they can present. When it comes to the killer, I like that she uses her head and doesn’t take unnecessary risks.

Since the book is written in Sookie’s first-person POV, we only see the supporting characters through her eyes. Bill is the consummate Southern gentleman, but as someone who’s been alive for 150 years, he struggles a bit with finding a balance between being protective and respecting Sookie’s autonomy. It’s clear that he can be a dangerous creature when provoked, but at the same time, he has a gentle side with Sookie and is far more self-controlled than some of his so-called friends, who don’t seem to have any compunction about killing humans. Overall, Bill is a good guy for a vampire and a character that I very much liked. In addition to Bill, there are several other secondary characters that we get to meet who play important roles. Sookie’s boss, Sam, is a little sweet on her and also protective of her, but he’s keeping a very big secret. Sookie’s brother, Jason, cares about her but isn’t always in tune with her needs. He isn’t the sharpest knife in the drawer and he’s a total a man-whore, which gets him pegged as a prime suspect in the murders. Sookie gets to meet Erik, a very old vampire who can pull rank on Bill if he chooses, and his business partner, Pam, who run the vampire bar, Fangtasia. Then there’s Sookie’s friend and fellow waitress, Arlene; Arlene’s ex-husband and current boyfriend, Rene; Andy, the detective investigating the murders; and many other quirky small-town cast members to round things out.

I’ve known about the Sookie Stackhouse series for a long time, as many of my romance reading friends on GoodReads had recommended it. For some reason, though, I wasn’t certain whether I would like it, so I put off reading it. Instead, I ended up watching the television show, True Blood, that’s based on the series first, which is a rarity for me. After enjoying it, I finally decided to put the books on my TBR list. Dead Until Dark ended up being a very good read and a good start to the series. I’d heard that the show was quite a bit different from the books, so I was bracing myself for disparate story lines. However, I was pleasantly surprised, based on what I recalled of the first season of True Blood, that it seemed to follow this first book fairly closely. There were some differences, but most of them weren’t jarring to me. I realize this may not continue as the series goes on, but I’m still eager to keep reading. I admit that because of watching the show first, there was little suspense for me to the mystery portion, because I remembered who the killer was. But I still think it was done well and probably would have kept me guessing if I didn’t already know. Another thing that I enjoyed was the romance between Bill and Sookie. I think one reason I’d been reluctant to read the books is that I didn’t know if they’d have enough romance to suit me, but this first book definitely did. Some readers classify the books as romance and I’m also comfortable calling Dead Until Dark a romance. I don’t know if that will be the case as I continue, but in this one, Bill and Sookie’s love story probably constituted roughly half of the book and it does have an HFN ending, with Bill taking steps to make the future of their relationship more secure. Everything taken together, I very much enjoyed this first foray into the Sookieverse and look forward to reading more soon.
… (more)
½
 
Flagged
mom2lnb | 595 other reviews | Mar 10, 2024 |
This book was pretty much the same as the first season of True Blood. There were a few differences, but for the most part, it was the same. Some scenes from the book, it felt like they were taken out perfectly and put into the TV show.

But, I do have to say, all in all, I enjoy the TV show better than the book. I love how Lafayette and Tara have a bigger presence in the show. Tara is totally absent from this book.
 
Flagged
thatnerd | 595 other reviews | Mar 2, 2024 |
This only gets two stars because it's part of one of my favorite series. Otherwise, one it would be. I don't know what happened with this book. Did she just write this one because she HAD to? I was happy to be done with this. Hopefully when I get around to reading the next one, it will be better.
 
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thatnerd | 229 other reviews | Mar 2, 2024 |

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Jeanne C. Stein Contributor
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Jim Butcher Contributor
Tate Hallaway Contributor
Brendan DuBois Contributor
Alan Gordon Contributor
Nancy Pickard Contributor
Karen Chance Contributor
Carrie Vaughn Contributor
Bacon Aguirre Contributor
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Statistics

Works
184
Also by
43
Members
159,558
Popularity
#36
Rating
3.8
Reviews
5,011
ISBNs
1,749
Languages
22
Favorited
581

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