As we gear up for the third season of True Blood, beginning June 13, the first full preview was just released. Click here to view it.
This post contains some spoilers.
Just as the first two seasons were loosely based on the first two of Charlaine Harris’s Southern Vampire Mysteries, so the third season will be based on the third book, Club Dead (which I review here). As we saw in the finale of season 2 of True Blood, Sookie’s vampire boyfriend Bill Compton goes missing. In the show, he vanishes in the middle of a marriage proposal, but in the book, after a period of distancing behavior (he is always holed up with his computer, to Sookie’s dismay) Bill leaves for an extended, mysterious “business trip” to Seattle. Later, after she is attacked by a were at Merlotte’s, Sookie learns — from Eric and Pam — that Bill was on some kind of business for the Queen of Louisiana (Sophie Ann), but has returned to his sire, Lorena, and is now in terrible danger.
Here is a cute promo poster:

Unlike the TV show, readers of the Sookie Stackhouse mysteries have had no knowledge to this point of who sired Bill, when, why or how (actually, Bill’s origin story is never told in the books, making the TV Civil War and roaring Twenties vignettes completely unique to the show). The addition of origin stories, including Eric’s, was an interesting choice on Ball’s part. I confess I felt their lack as I read the books, but perhaps I have just been conditioned to think of vampires as an “other” whose existence needs explanation, while Harris wanted readers to think of them as no more mysterious than humans. That said, despite finding the character of Eric’s sire Godric intriguingly enhanced on the show (and Season 3 will have lots of flashbacks of Eric and Godric), I haven’t been thrilled with them.
In Club Dead, a furious and heartbroken Sookie nevertheless does the right thing (by her lights) and sets off for Mississippi to rescue Bill. There, she is under the protection of Acide Herveaux, a were, and we are introduced to a new paranormal element (Merlotte’s owner Sam is a shifter, quite different in Harris’s universe from weres). Weres are pack animals, with a tendency to aggression. They are anxiously waiting to see how the vampires’ “coming out” goes for them among the humans. Some weres want to follow suit. The title of the book, Club Dead, is the nickname of the Mississippi bar where the weres hang out.
This is the book where Harris deviated completely from the romance script. Not only does Harris introduce a fourth potential suitor in Alcide (leading some to call “The Anita Blake” effect on her), but what happens between Bill and Sookie is surprising, shocking, and sad.
I will be very interested to see what Ball and co do with this book in Season 3 of True Blood. Overall, the casting has been great (Sookie the one major exception), and from what I can see casting of new characters continues to impress, at least visually. Here’s a shot of Alcide:

Joe Mangianello
And Alcide’s problematic girlfriend, Debbie Pelt (a character I really enjoyed):

And the vampire king of Mississippi, Russell Eddington, played by Denis O’Hare:

Here’s the regular cast promo poster:

Ball will continue to add his own elements to Harris’s universe. First, they’ve cast a beautiful new female dancer at Fangtasia, whom Eric will hook up with. Second, they’ve cast someone as a Reverend Daniels, to whom Tara’s mother will turn for comfort. A vampire love interest has been cast for Tara. Lafayette will get more screen time, as well as a boyfriend and mother, the latter played by Alfre Woodard. Also, more in store for Arlene and her relationship to the supernatural, and more with Jessica and Hoyt, the latter moving in with Jason, who continues to experience comedic sexual mishaps.
It looks like Ball will continue his signature bloody and hypersexualized tone, and that includes accelerating the timetable of Sookie and Eric’s complex developing relationship (notice her come on to him in the preview).
I enjoyed Club Dead a lot, especially the introduction of Alcide and the weres. Readers will recall a very memorable final (or near final) scene with Eric, Bill, and Sookie. My eyes may be deceiving me, but I thought I may have seen evidence of it in the preview.
While I would have loved it if Tara and her mother would have gone the way of the maenad, there’s a lot to look forward to come June 13.

Related posts:
- A Sookie Stackhouse Reader’s Verdict on Season 1 of HBO’s True Blood Having read — and fallen in love with – 8 of the 9 Southern Vampire Mysteries by Charlaine Harris (I’m...
- True Blood Season 2: All Star Romance Review Panel What happens when three romance novel readers and devotees of Charlaine Harris’s Sookie Stackhouse series ruminate on an entire season...
- Review: Club Dead, Charlaine Harris My Take in Brief: A terrific third installment, although I was slightly less enthralled this time out. This review contains...
- Academics Sucking the Blood From Twilight Once again, here are my totally fallible notes from sessions at the Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association Annual Meeting April...
- Academics Take a Bite Out of Sookie Stackhouse I’m in NOLA at the Popular Culture Association/American Culture Association Annual Meeting (for posterity: April 2009) I just attended am...
- Review: Living Dead in Dallas, Charlaine Harris My Take in Brief: A terrific second installment. For background on this series, and introductions to the main characters, see...




#1 by Julia Rachel Barrett on May 15, 2010 - 11:00 am
I was enamored of True Blood, Season One – outstanding writing and a fleshing out of characters like Jason and Tara who were much more secondary characters in the books. Season Two, aside from Eric, lost me a bit. Too much maenad, too much Tara, too much Tara’s mother. Too much Eggs. In Season Three, I’d like to see a little more of Pam and a greater focus on the main characters. I try to remind myself that while True Blood is based on the book series, they are not the same thing.
#2 by Wanderer on May 15, 2010 - 2:59 pm
Haven’t seen the preview yet since I’m on my phone not laptop but I’m looking forward to season 3! I also gained Charlaine Harris a new fan. I gave my sister the first two books a few months ago and she read them in days. Gave her the rest of the series as well as the TV shows and now she’s an all caught up fan waiting for season 3 just like me.It’s nice to have someone in the real world to talk about the the show AND the books. It was funny, too, because after reading she liked Alcide out of the 3 guys. I had to do a double take on her and ask, “What about Eric?”
What about Eric, indeed!
#3 by Jessica on May 16, 2010 - 6:58 am
@Julia Rachel Barrett: Julia, I couldn’t agree more with your assessment of the difference between Seaosn 1 and 2 and your hopes for Season 3!
@Wanderer: LOL. I think Eric becomes a love interest to root for only in Book 4, personally.
I love the books, and like the series quite a bit. It happens that we have a group of us who watch the series here in town, and we get together sometimes to do it, but I wish I knew folks in RL who read the books. I think my spouse plans to start reading them this summer, and I can;t wait.
#4 by Kate Diamond on May 16, 2010 - 11:36 am
Mmmm… Alexander Skarsgård is so tasty. Hurray for fabulous Eric Northman casting.
#5 by Ariel/Sycorax Pine on May 16, 2010 - 6:04 pm
I. Can’t. Wait. And I am particularly glad to hear we will get more of Eric and Godric despite the obviously impediments to continuing that plot line.
My problem with True Blood’s first two seasons has been that the supernatural runs away with the show, to the detriment of its really rich characterization and canny realism. The real delight was in seeing what happened to a grittily (and campily) real world of prejudices and complexities when a discrete set of supernatural elements are introduced to it. Even in the books, I found myself increasingly dismayed when the fairy elements are introduced and quickly escalate the absurdity of the plots. And the terrible side-effect of the Marianne plot line was that every time someone fell under her spell, they were wiped clean of characterization and thus of interest. Hmm. In recent installments of the (book) series, I have almost wished that she could just settle into the details of Bon Temps and its characters again. (Which is why one of my favorite installments is the Eric-amnesia one.)
#6 by Cassie on May 17, 2010 - 7:52 am
Actually, Bill’s origin story is told in the books. Club Dead is all about Bill’s sire, Lorena, and the most recent book goes into even more detail about why Lorena made Bill a vamp. Plus gives juicy details of Eric’s origins.
I’ll admit, I don’t watch the tv show (don’t have HBO, don’t really want to pay for the show on iTunes), so I get that they’re likely revealing the origin stories at a different pace. But the books have all the info, I promise!
#7 by Jessica on May 17, 2010 - 8:07 am
@Cassie:
Maybe I will have to reread it. I remember very little page time given to how and why Bill became a vampire, and I don’t recall any flashbacks to their lives together prior to his meeting Sookie.
Of course, I still have to read the latest. Can’t wait!
#8 by Anne on May 17, 2010 - 10:32 am
What I don’t like about the TV show is the lack of “Bubba”. I guess they were afraid of lawsuits.