The Night Is Alive cover

The Night Is Alive

Krewe of Hunters • Book 10

4.16 Goodreads
(4.0K ratings)

Why You'll Love This

Savannah's oldest tavern hides a colonial-era pirate ghost, a fresh body, and an FBI agent who can talk to the dead — and that's just the opening.

  • Great if you want: Southern Gothic atmosphere blended with paranormal crime investigation
  • The experience: steady, atmospheric pacing with romantic tension woven throughout
  • The writing: Graham layers historical detail and supernatural elements without losing the mystery thread
  • Skip if: ghost-as-plot-device strains your suspension of disbelief

About This Book

Savannah, Georgia carries its history the way Spanish moss carries the heat — draped over everything, impossible to ignore. In The Night Is Alive, that atmosphere becomes something darker when FBI trainee Abigail Anderson returns home to find her grandfather murdered inside a tavern that has stood since the 1750s. What unfolds isn't just a mystery about who killed him, but why the dead seem unwilling to stay quiet about it. The stakes are personal, the setting is genuinely unsettling, and the emotional pull of a granddaughter fighting for justice in a city that keeps its secrets buried deep gives the story real weight.

Heather Graham writes Savannah the way a local would — with texture and specificity rather than postcard romance. The Krewe of Hunters series has always balanced the procedural and the paranormal without letting either element crowd out the other, and this tenth installment hits that balance cleanly. The pacing stays tight across nearly four hundred pages, the supernatural elements feel earned rather than decorative, and the central relationship between Abby and Agent Malachi Gordon develops with enough friction to hold genuine interest. Readers who love a mystery with a strong sense of place will find this one delivers.