Moon Books in Order
Part ofDesirée Books in OrderThis page lists the Moon series by Desirée in order, with book summaries, character notes, series background, and tips on how to follow the magic soaked Atlanta storyline.
Last updated: December 24, 2025
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Publication Order
5 books
Skye Fall
by Desirée
2021
In the finale of the Moon series, Jasmine, Percy, Homer, and Pia face the fallout of every bargain they have made with love and magic. As a new Moon Run ceremony approaches, family loyalties, curses, and desires collide in Atlanta.
Moon Child
by Desirée
2020
Pack leader Homer Skye cannot shake his growing attraction to Pia, the mother of the daughter she hid from him for two years. While he plots to steal back what a spell took from him, Jasmine’s marriage to Percy darkens, pulling both families deeper into dangerous magic.
Fantasea
by Desirée
2020
Dark magic wraps tighter around Jasmine and Percy’s toxic marriage as old memories surface and strange accidents stalk them. With mermaids, angels, and two mysterious brothers entering the picture, the Skye and Milton families must navigate a city where fantasy creatures walk Atlanta’s streets.
Charmed
by Desirée
2020
Now married to arrogant mama’s boy Percy Milton, Jasmine finds that every part of her life is unraveling, from family secrets to their sudden break with his parents. As Delilah Skye’s schemes backfire, wolves, sirens, and black magic close in on both the Milton and Skye clans.
Hoodwinked
by Desirée
2019
A lifelong member of Atlanta high society, Jasmine is tired of her loveless engagement to wealthy Percy Milton and desperate enough to visit witch Delilah Skye. At the same time, wolf pack leader Homer Skye discovers he has a secret daughter, tangling love, family, and full moon magic together.
Series background & context
The Moon series takes Desirée’s Atlanta universe and folds in witches, wolf packs, and full moon rituals until everyday drama turns into a black urban fantasy. The books follow the same network of families readers meet in her college and Carter stories, but now the stakes include curses, prophecies, and supernatural bloodlines.
At the center is Jasmine, a rich Atlanta socialite who has been raised to marry well, not to marry for love. Locked into a cold engagement with Percy Hugo Milton, she finally admits that money and status are not enough. That moment of desperation sends her to Delilah Skye, a sharp tongued witch who promises friendship, great sex, and true love, then reveals that everything Jasmine wants might be buried in the man she hates most.
Running alongside Jasmine’s search for happiness is Homer Skye’s storyline. Homer is a charismatic pack leader with the world at his feet until a chance encounter with Pia Milton turns into a secret child and a tangled second chance he did not see coming. Homer is pulled between the polished life he planned with long time girlfriend Nasia and the messy reality of co parenting with Pia while strange magic tugs at both of them.
Across Hoodwinked, Moon Child, Charmed, Fantasea, and Skye Fall, those threads weave together. Full moons over Atlanta bring out mermaids in local waters, angels fighting for control, sirens, and other beings that stalk the edges of the city. Delilah’s spells do not always behave, family elders hide more than they admit, and every romantic choice Jasmine and Homer make ripples through both their human relatives and their supernatural kin.
The tone shifts from raunchy humor to genuine heartbreak. One chapter might be a crowded family dinner full of side eyes and petty arguments, the next a ritual under the moon that changes someone’s fate. Readers who enjoy long arcs will see how the Moon series reclaims characters from the Tuesday and Skye Indie Film books, giving them magic soaked second chances.
Underneath the fantasy, the questions stay grounded: what does it mean to choose love when everyone expects you to choose money, and what happens when the people you are tied to by blood or pack keep hurting you. The Moon novels lean into mess, black Southern culture, and belief in the impossible, but always circle back to women deciding what kind of life, and what kind of magic, they will accept.
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