Starfall Point Books in Order

Below is the complete list of Molly Harper’s Starfall Point books in order. For this series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.

Publication Order of Starfall Point Books

  1. Witches Get Stuff Done (2023)
    by Molly Harper
    Witches Get Stuff Done was published in 2023 and is listed as book #1 in the Starfall Point series.
  2. Big Witch Energy (2023)
    by Molly Harper
    Published in 2023, Big Witch Energy is listed as book #2 in the Starfall Point series.
  3. Never Been Witched (2025)
    by Molly Harper
    Never Been Witched is a 2025 release and appears as book #3 in the Starfall Point series.

About Starfall Point

Molly Harper’s Starfall Point series is a paranormal romantic comedy series set on a small Michigan island where witches, ghosts, family secrets, and local oddities collide with Harper’s familiar mix of humor, warmth, and supernatural chaos. The series begins with Witches Get Stuff Done, continues with Big Witch Energy, and follows with Never Been Witched. It has the same breezy, character-driven appeal that made Harper’s Half-Moon Hollow and Mystic Bayou books popular, but Starfall Point leans more heavily into witchcraft, haunted houses, inherited responsibility, and the messy business of building a coven.

The first book, Witches Get Stuff Done, introduces Riley Everett, who arrives on Starfall Point after inheriting a strange old house from an aunt she barely knew. The inheritance is not simply property; it comes with magical responsibility, ghostly complications, and the discovery that Riley’s family history is far stranger than she expected. Shaddow House becomes one of the series’ central locations, full of spirits, secrets, and unfinished business. Riley’s adjustment to the island gives the opening book its charm, especially as she tries to understand her powers while dealing with a house that is anything but quiet.

Edison Held, the local librarian and historian, gives Riley’s story a grounded romantic counterpoint. He is curious, steady, and fascinated by the island’s past, which makes him a natural partner for a heroine trying to untangle family mysteries and supernatural rules at the same time. Their romance works because it grows inside a larger mystery rather than floating separately from it. Starfall Point itself becomes part of the relationship: the island, the house, the ghosts, and the history all push Riley toward a life she never planned.

Big Witch Energy shifts focus to Caroline Wilton and Ben Hoult, giving the series a second-chance romance shaped by regret, family obligation, and a curse that has kept Caroline tied to Starfall Point. Ben’s return, now as a doctor and single father, forces Caroline to face the life she might have had and the choices magic has made more complicated. This second book deepens the coven structure, showing that the witches of Starfall Point are not just quirky paranormal heroines but women carrying inherited burdens, protective duties, and emotional wounds.

Never Been Witched brings Alice Seastairs into the center. Alice runs her grandparents’ antique shop and has spent years handling haunted objects, unruly ghosts, and magical problems that arrive with other people’s possessions. Her romance with Collin Bancroft, the new owner of a historic haunted hotel, gives the third book a fresh setting while still tying back to the larger supernatural mystery around Shaddow House. Alice’s story expands the ghostly side of the series and pushes the coven toward bigger revelations about the island’s magical past.

Starfall Point works best as paranormal romance with an ensemble mystery thread. Each book has its own central couple, but the witches, ghosts, curses, and local history connect the stories closely. Harper’s tone keeps the series playful and accessible, yet the emotional stakes are real: inheritance, loneliness, regret, friendship, family secrets, and the fear of being responsible for powers no one fully explained. The result is a cozy, funny, lightly spooky series about women discovering that magic is rarely convenient, ghosts are rarely patient, and love has a way of arriving right when life is already haunted enough.

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