Of course, there are some that just are coming to a head. I highly recommend Patricia Brigg's Mercy Thompson books as well as her Alpha and Omega series that is set in the same world.
And I recommend the Southern Vampire Mystery books, AKA Sookie Stackhouse novels. Told from Sookie Stackhouse's point of view (first person), the novels are funny, scary, and full of life.
And yes, these are the novels that the HBO series, TrueBlood, is based on.
Previous to these books, the only time I've heard the name "Sookie" was from Witches of Eastwick. Apparently, it's a form of Susanna. This Sookie has telepathic powers. She has spent her life bombarded with other people's (sometimes inappropriate) thoughts. But when she meets a vampire called Bill Compton, she realizes that there is a blessed silence with him. Sookie can't read vampire thoughts. She is drawn into a world of vampire, werewolves and other "supes" or supernatural creatures. Each book seems to throw Sookie into more danger. The (mostly) sweet heroine has to navigate through dark waters, blood bonds, and fairy godmothers.
Dead and Gone, the 9th book in the series, brings the Fae into the mix. Other urban fantasy novels touch on the dark, savage nature of the Fae. Dead and Gone brings some of these characteristics to the fore.
Sookie is not a simple woman. She and her relationships are complex. She tries to do her best, but she isn't one to scheme. She just wants to live her life.
And no, Sookie doesn't have a harem of hot guys she goes through. She's a one-guy-at-a-time kind of girl. And after so many LKH orgies, I think it's a nice change.