fantasy, Fiction, gothic, horror, Uncategorized, young adult fiction

Books with Bite for Teens

Sink your teeth into a story with high stakes where some people are not as friendly as they first appear. Will you root for or against the vampires? Curated by Samantha Matherne.

Looking for digital? Check for eBooks and eAudiobooks here.
cloudLibrary | Libby | Freading

The Coldest Girl in Coldtown by Holly Black
Tana lives in a world where walled cities called Coldtowns exist. In them, quarantined monsters and humans mingle in a decadently bloody mix of predator and prey. The only problem is, once you pass through Coldtown’s gates, you can never leave.

One morning, after a perfectly ordinary party, Tana wakes up surrounded by corpses. The only other survivors of this massacre are her exasperatingly endearing ex-boyfriend, infected and on the edge, and a mysterious boy burdened with a terrible secret. Shaken and determined, Tana enters a race against the clock to save the three of them the only way she knows how: by going straight to the wicked, opulent heart of Coldtown itself.

The Coldest Girl in Coldtown is a wholly original story of rage and revenge, of guilt and horror, and of love and loathing from bestselling and acclaimed author Holly Black.


A Tempest of Tea by Hafsah Faizal
Why save the world when you can have tea?

On the streets of White Roaring, Arthie Casimir is a criminal mastermind and collector of secrets. Her prestigious tearoom transforms into an illegal bloodhouse by dark, catering to the vampires feared by society. But when her establishment is threatened, Arthie is forced to strike an unlikely deal with an alluring adversary to save itโ€”and she canโ€™t do the job alone.

Calling on some of the city’s most skilled outcasts, Arthie hatches a plan to infiltrate the sinister, glittering vampire society known as the Athereum. But not everyone in her ragtag crew is on her side, and as the truth behind the heist unfolds, Arthie finds herself in the midst of a conspiracy that will threaten the world as she knows it.

From the New York Timesโ€”bestselling author of We Hunt the Flame comes the first book in a hotly anticipated fantasy duology teeming with romance and revenge, led by an orphan girl willing to do whatever it takes to save her self-made kingdom. Dark, action-packed, and swoon worthy, this is Hafsah Faizal better than ever.


The Revenant Games by Margie Fuston
All of Us Villains meets Kingdom of the Wicked in this “urgent action-adventure” (Publishers Weekly) following a teen determined to win the competition held by warring vampire and witch kingdoms, only to develop complicated feelings for the vampire she’s supposed to hand over.

Blood is survival for seventeen-year-old Bly, who lives in the poverty-stricken human villages caught between enemy vampire and witch kingdoms. Most of the time, vampires and witches live in uneasy truce, buying human blood for their food and spells. But for two weeks a year, the ceasefire dissolves, and they hold the Revenant Games.

Any human can play in the games for either the witches or the vampires. Alongside life-changing riches, the witches will raise one person from the dead for whoever captures the highest-ranking vampire. In turn, the vampires offer immortality to whoever captures the most powerful witch. For most humans, the games are a ticket out of poverty. For Bly, it’s a chance to get back her dead sister, Elise, and save the life of her dying best friend, Emerson.

Together, she and Emerson forge a dangerous plan to play both sides and win both prizes: resurrection for Elise and immortality for Emerson. But when the vampire they capture stirs a passion in Bly that she hasn’t felt in a long time, she’ll have to make a choice: her sister or the boy who’s shown her there’s more to life than just survival.


The Lost Girls by Sonia Hartl
Sonia Hartlโ€™s The Lost Girls is laced with dark humor and queer love; itโ€™s John Tucker Must Die with a feminist girl gang of vampires.

When Elton Irving turned Holly Liddell into a vampire in 1987, he promised her eternal love. But thirty-four years later, Elton has left her, her hair will be crimped for the rest of immortality, and the only job she can get as a forever-sixteen-year-old is the midnight shift at Taco Bell.

Hollyโ€™s afterlife takes an interesting turn when she meets Rose McKay and Ida Ripley. Having also been turned and discarded by Eltonโ€”Rose in 1954, and Ida, his ex-fiancรฉe, in 1921โ€”they want to help her, and ask for her help in return.

Rose and Ida are going to kill Elton before he turns another girl. Though Holly is hurt and angry with Elton for tossing her aside, sheโ€™s reluctant to kill her ex, until Holly meets Parker Kerrโ€”the new girl Elton has set his sights onโ€”and feels a quick, and nerve-wracking attraction to her.


Big Bad Me by Aislinn Oโ€™Loughlin
Evie Wilder is living a very normal life. Except for the fact that her mum has gone missing, sheโ€™s just found out sheโ€™s a werewolf, she and her sister have to go into hiding from supernatural beings, and thereโ€™s not a single helpful vampire slayer to be found.

With the help of Kevin, the dorky-hot teenage manager of the guesthouse where Evie and Kate go to lie low, Evie begins to learn to harness her wolfish abilities. But thereโ€™s something a bit odd about Kevin that Evie canโ€™t quite put her finger on.

Meanwhile, reports of animal attacks are increasing, local teenagers have started to go missing, and Evie is about to find herself at the centre of a supernatural showdown.


Bloody Fool for Love: A Spike Prequel by William Ritter
Bloody Fool for Love from New York Times best-selling author William Ritter marks the beginning of an all-new series that explores prequel stories about fan-favorite Buffy characters.

Spike just wants to enjoy the spoils of his new badass reputation. Heโ€™s now a legendary slayer-killer, and heโ€™s returning to Londonโ€•the greatest city in the world. Unfortunately, his new abode is far from ideal (mostly a dank basement), and the rest of his strange little โ€œfamilyโ€ is reeling from the fact that their patriarch, Angel, abandoned them. Spikeโ€™s love, Drusilla, seems especially heartbroken over the loss and spends her time lost in her tarot cards and planning their next gruesome family dinner when they all can be reunited.

Desperate to break Dru out of her melancholy, Spike vows to steal a powerful relic that will help her focus on their dark future together. Itโ€™s the perfect planโ€•that is until a monster named Gunnar, leader of the demon underworld of London, steals the relic first. Forced to form his own ragtag group of mercenaries, Spike plans an epic heist against a ruthless gang of undead criminals. Confronted with paranormal plots, royal black ops, and tea (they may be abominations, but theyโ€™re British abominations, thank you very much), Spike soon realizes that his homecoming is about to get bloody.

This action-packed novel inspired by one of Buffyโ€™s most infamous bad boys is part Bonnie and Clyde, part Sherlock and Watson, with just a bit more bloodsucking.


Carry On by Rainbow Rowell
Simon Snow is the worst chosen one whoโ€™s ever been chosen.

Thatโ€™s what his roommate, Baz, says. And Baz might be evil and a vampire and a complete git, but heโ€™s probably right.

Half the time, Simon canโ€™t even make his wand work, and the other half, he sets something on fire. His mentor is avoiding him, his girlfriend broke up with him, and thereโ€™s a magic-eating monster running around wearing Simonโ€™s face. Baz would be having a field day with all this, if he were hereโ€”itโ€™s their last year at the Watford School of Magicks, and Simonโ€™s infuriating nemesis didnโ€™t even bother to show up.

Carry On is a ghost story, a love story, a mystery and a melodrama. It has just as much kissing and talking as youโ€™d expect from a Rainbow Rowell storyโ€”but far, far more monsters.


In Nightfall by Suzanne Young
In the quaint town of Nightfall, Oregon, it isn’t the dark you should be afraid of–it’s the girls. The Lost Boys meets Buffy the Vampire Slayer in this propulsive novel from the New York Times bestselling author of The Treatment.

Theo and her brother, Marco, threw the biggest party of the year. And got caught. Their punishment? Leave Arizona to spend the summer with their grandmother in the rainy beachside town of Nightfall, Oregon–population 846 souls.

The small town is cute, when it’s not raining, but their grandmother is superstitious and strangely antisocial. Upon their arrival she lays out the one house rule: always be home before dark. But Theo and Marco are determined to make the most of their summer, and on their first day they meet the enigmatic Minnow and her friends. Beautiful and charismatic, the girls have a magnetic pull that Theo and her brother can’t resist.

But Minnow and her friends are far from what they appear.

And that one rule? Theo quickly realizes she should have listened to her grandmother. Because after dark, something emerges in Nightfall. And it doesn’t plan to let her leave.

Leave a comment