Edie Spence Books in Order
Part ofCassie Alexander Books in OrderThis page shows the Edie Spence books by Cassie Alexander in order, with quick summaries, series background, and where to start.
Last updated: June 8, 2026
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Publication Order
5 books
Moonshifted
by Cassie Alexander
2012
After a vampire attack, Edie tries to get back to work and instead lands in the middle of a werewolf power struggle. A hit-and-run victim, rival packs, and a dangerous new ally turn her quiet life into a war zone.
Nightshifted
by Cassie Alexander
2012
New nurse Edie Spence takes a job on a secret hospital ward for supernatural patients and learns very quickly that vampires are worse than bad charting. When one patient dies with a warning on his lips, Edie gets pulled into undead politics.
Shapeshifted
by Cassie Alexander
2012
Edie loses her old job just as her mother becomes critically ill, and the only possible cure comes from the supernatural world that now wants nothing to do with her. To save her mom, she has to step back into vampire chaos.
Deadshifted
by Cassie Alexander
2013
Edie and Asher head on a cruise hoping for a break, but an old enemy and a strange illness ruin that plan fast. Soon Edie is fighting for the life of the man she loves in the middle of the ocean.
Bloodshifted
by Cassie Alexander
2014
Edie wakes up kidnapped by vampires and facing the horror she used to treat in other people. Saving herself and her baby means surviving a world where human rules no longer apply.
Series background & context
The Edie Spence books are urban fantasy built on one very strong hook: what if the exhausted nurse on the night shift had to care for vampires, werewolves, zombies, and anything else that came through the wrong door? In Nightshifted, Edie takes a job on Y4, a secret ward hidden under County Hospital, and learns quickly that good bedside manner only gets you so far when the patients can bite back.
Edie is not a chosen one in the usual fantasy sense. She is underpaid, overworked, worried about her addict brother, and trying to find her footing in a workplace where almost nobody tells her the full truth. That is a big part of the appeal. The books use her nursing skills as real problem-solving tools, so the danger feels concrete even when the patient chart involves supernatural species.
This is hospital drama with fangs.
The series grows outward from that first ward. Moonshifted throws Edie into werewolf politics. Shapeshifted puts family pressure front and center when her mother becomes dangerously ill. Deadshifted strands her on a cruise with an old enemy and a mysterious illness. By Bloodshifted, the nightmare is completely personal, because Edie is no longer just treating the fallout from vampire blood. She is living it.
The medical setting matters more than it would in most paranormal series. These books care about shifts, coworkers, triage, exhaustion, and the weird mix of dark humor and competence that keeps difficult jobs running. That lived-in detail makes the supernatural pieces feel stranger, not less. A vampire attack is one thing. A vampire attack when you still have charting to finish hits in a different way.
Tone-wise, the series is gritty but very readable, with a lot of momentum and a heroine who sounds like a person rather than a fantasy archetype. There is romance in the books, but the bigger through line is survival, loyalty, and the cost of getting pulled deeper into a hidden world. If you like urban fantasy that feels adult in the everyday sense, jobs, family trouble, hard choices, not just in the violent sense, Edie Spence is a strong place to start.
What really holds the series together is Edie herself. She is capable, stubborn, and often in over her head, which is exactly why the books work. The world is full of monsters, but she still has to go to work, pay rent, and decide who she can trust. That mix makes the whole thing feel sharper and more human.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.



















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