En un mundo donde los vampiros se han dado a conocer gracias a TrueBlood, una sangre sintética que les permite convivir con los humanos, se desarrollan las aventuras de Sookie Stackhouse, una sexy camarera con facultades telepáticas que vive en un pequeño pueblo del sur de los Estados Unidos.La famosa saga creada por Charlaine Harris ha inspirado la serie de televisión más transgresora del momento, creando fieles seguidores en todo el mundo.Y ahora los cinco primeros títulos de la saga están disponibles en una caja promocional, con el último de ellos –no se vende por separado– gratis. Es una oporturnidad ú por la compra de la caja, consigue gratis Más muerto que nunca, disponible en exclusiva con esta promoción.Títulos que1. Muerto hasta el anochecer2. Vivir y morir en Dallas3. El Club de los Muertos4. Muerto para el mundo5. Más muerto que nunca
Charlaine Harris has been a published writer for over forty years. Her first two books were standalones, followed by a long sabbatical when she was having children. Then she began the Aurora Teagarden book, mysteries featuring a short librarian (eventually adapted for Hallmark movies). The darker Lily Bard books came next, about a house cleaner with a dark past and considerable fighting skills.
Tired of abiding by the mystery rules, Harris wrote a novel about a telepathic barmaid that took at least two years to sell. When the book was published, it turned into a best seller, and DEAD UNTIL DARK and the subsequent Sookie books were adapted in Alan Ball's "True Blood" series. At the same time, Harris began the Harper Connelly books. Harper can find the bones of the dead and see their last minute.
When those two series wound to a close, the next three books were about a mysterious town in Texas, called Midnight.
A change in publisher and editor led to Harris's novels about a female gunslinger in an alternate America, Lizbeth Rose. The Gunnie Rose books concluded with the sixth novel.
Dead Until Dark (Sookie Stackhouse, #1) - 1 star I have to say this is one book that surprised me. I ended up enjoying watching the TV show a great deal more than actually reading about it, which in my world doesn’t happen very often. I found the story to be a lot more exciting when it was brought to life on a screen rather than sitting flat on the page.