English diminutive of Susannah (Hebrew, 'lily'), used as a standalone name and popularized in literature.
Sookie is a warm, Southern-inflected diminutive with roots in Susan — from the Hebrew Shoshana, meaning "lily" or "rose," a flower name of great antiquity that passed through Greek as Sousanna and into English as Susan, Susannah, and its many affectionate shortenings. In the American South particularly, Sookie developed as a pet name with a deeply folksy, affectionate character — the kind of name that feels like sunlight on a porch, intimate and unhurried. It also carries a peculiar rural resonance as a call used to summon pigs, which paradoxically gave the name a down-to-earth, earthy charm in Southern vernacular.
In modern popular culture, Sookie enjoys two distinct moments of fame. Sookie St. James — the warm, endearingly anxious chef in the beloved television series Gilmore Girls — gave the name a cozy, comedic sweetness, played memorably by Melissa McCarthy in one of her early career-defining roles.
Then came Sookie Stackhouse, the telepathic waitress protagonist of Charlaine Harris's Southern Vampire Mysteries and the HBO series True Blood — a fiercer, more complex Sookie whose name felt both folksy and slightly uncanny, perfectly suited to a woman living at the edge of the supernatural. Between these two cultural touchstones, Sookie transformed from a gentle nickname into a name with genuine narrative depth: approachable yet quirky, rooted in Southern soil but capable of surprising range.