How to read Jack Ryan books ?

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Dr. John Patrick “Jack” Ryan, Sr., KCVO (Hon.), Ph.D., is an iconic character brought to life by the imagination of Tom Clancy. When we first encounter him, Ryan is a highly skilled CIA analyst with a Marine Corps background. However, his journey is far from over, as he steadily ascends through the ranks of the intelligence world.

Tom Clancy’s creation of Jack Ryan Sr. marked one of his most enduring and beloved characters, featuring him in several novels before extending the legacy to Jack Ryan Jr. The Ryan family’s adventures know no bounds, giving rise to a vast and intricate literary universe.

These captivating tales find their home in the thrilling spy and techno-thriller genre, where espionage and cutting-edge technology collide. Despite Tom Clancy’s passing in 2013, his legacy lives on through the skilled pen of Mark Greaney, who continues to expand the Ryan universe with new adventures centered around Jack Ryan Jr., ensuring that the tradition of espionage and intrigue remains alive for readers and fans alike.

The Jack Ryan Reading Order:

In my opinion, the best way to be introduced to the Jack Ryan series is to begin with The Hunt for Red October. It was the first book published with Jack Ryan. That said, I propose you here a chronological reading order. I’ll add, at the end, the publication order.

I. Before Jack Ryan

  1. Without Remorse, by Tom Clancy – This novel doesn’t revolve around Jack Ryan, but John Clark. Set during the Vietnam War, in the city of Baltimore, the book tells the origin of Clark and alternates between two major story arcs. In one of them, we met Emmet Ryan, the father of Jack. Clarke is a recurring character in the Ryan novels.

II. The Jack Ryan Era in Order

  1. Patriot Games, by Tom Clancy – In an explosive wave of violence, an ultra-left-wing faction of the IRA is hunting one man for his act of salvation in an attempted assassination. And now Jack Ryan must pay with his life.
  2. Red Rabbit, by Tom Clancy – When Jack Ryan joins the CIA as an analyst he is thrust into a world of political intrigue and conspiracy. Stationed in England, he quickly finds himself debriefing a Soviet defector with an extraordinary story to tell: senior Russian officials are plotting to assassinate Pope John Paul II.
  3. The Hunt for Red October, by Tom Clancy – During the Cold War, Marko Alexandrovich Ramius, a Lithuanian submarine commander in the Soviet Navy, intends to defect to the United States with his officers on board the experimental nuclear submarine Red October. The entire Soviet Atlantic Fleet is ordered to hunt down the submarine and destroy her at all costs. The Americans are determined to find her first and get her safely to port in the intelligence coups of all time.
  1. Red Winter, by Marc Cameron – 1985. A top secret F117 aircraft crashes into the Nevada desert. The Nighthawk is the most advanced fighting machine in the world and the Soviets will do anything to get their hands on its secrets. In East Berlin, a mysterious figure contacts the CIA with an incredible offer-invaluable details of his government’s espionage plans in return for asylum. It’s an offer they can’t pass up…if it’s genuine, but the risks are too great to blindly stumble into a deal. With the East German secret police closing in, someone will have to go to behind the Berlin Wall to investigate the potential defector. It’s a job Deputy Director James Greer can only trust to one man–Jack Ryan.
  2. The Cardinal of the Kremlin, by Tom Clancy – Two men possess vital data on Russia’s Star Wars missile defense system. One of them is CARDINAL – America’s highest agent in the Kremlin – and he’s about to be terminated by the KGB. The other is the one American who can save CARDINAL and lead the world to the brink of peace or war.
  3. Clear and Present Danger, by Tom Clancy – Colombian drug lords have assassinated the American Ambassador and the visiting head of the FBI. The decision is made to send undercover teams into Colombia. Back in the USA, men armed with the most sophisticated tools their country can devise prepare to take the fight to the enemy. But does anyone know who the real enemy is? Jack Ryan and CIA field officer John Clark must find the answer.
  1. The Sum of All Fears, by Tom Clancy – Deputy Director of the CIA Jack Ryan lays the groundwork for a peace plan that could end centuries of conflict in the Middle East. But ruthless terrorists have their hands on a nuclear weapon and have placed it on American soil in the midst of an escalation in tension with the Soviet Union. The terrorists hope to rekindle cold war animosity and prevent reconciliation between Israelis and Palestinians.
  2. Debt of Honor, by Tom Clancy – Razio Yamata, one of Japan’s most influential industrialists, has devised a plan to cripple America. When the faulty gas tank on one Tennessee family’s car leads to their fiery death, an opportunistic U. S. congressman uses the occasion to rush a new trade law through the system. The law is designed to squeeze Japan economically. Instead, it provides Yamata with the leverage he needs to put his plan into action. There’s only one man to find out who the culprit is Jack Ryan, the new President’s National Security Advisor.
  3. Executive Orders, by Tom Clancy – Jack Ryan had agreed to accept the vice-presidency only as a caretaker for a year, and now, suddenly an incalculable weight has fallen on his shoulders. How do you run a government without a government? Where do you even begin? With stunning force, Ryan’s responsibilities crush on him. He must calm an anxious and grieving nation, allay the skepticism of the world’s leaders, conduct a swift investigation of the tragedy, and arrange a massive state funeral – all while attempting to reconstitute a Cabinet and a Congress with the greatest possible speed.
  1. Rainbow Six, by Tom Clancy – Several NATO countries have collectively organized an elite counter-terrorist unit named Rainbow composed of the best soldiers from the militaries of several nations. The team is led by John Clark must face a group of terrorists like none the world has ever encountered before, a band of men and women so extreme that their success could literally mean the end of life on this earth as we know it.
  2. The Bear and the Dragon, by Tom Clancy – A high-level assassination attempt in Russia has the newly elected Ryan sending his most trusted eyes and ears – including antiterrorism specialist John Clark – to Moscow, for he fears the worst is yet to come.

III. The Jack Ryan, jr. Era in Order

As Jack Ryan comes out of retirement, he learns that his son, Jack Jr., is now a field operative on the Campus. The Jack Ryan Series focuses now as much on Jack as on his son.

  1. The Teeth of the Tiger, by Tom Clancy – Jack Ryan Jr. is recruited by the Campus, an “off-the-books” intelligence agency, as an analyst. He finds that nothing has prepared him for what he is about to encounter. For it is indeed a different world out there, and in here… and it is about to become far more dangerous.
  2. Dead or Alive, by Tom Clancy with Grant Blackwood – Now covert intelligence expert Jack Ryan Jr. and his compatriots at The Campus have come up against their greatest foe: a sadistic killer known as the Emir. Mastermind of countless horrific attacks, the Emir has eluded capture by every law enforcement agency in the world. But his greatest devastation is yet to be unleashed as he plans a monumental strike at the heart of America.
  3. Locked On, by Tom Clancy with Mark Greaney – A devout enemy of Jack, Sr. launches a privately-funded vendetta to discredit him and connect him to a mysterious killing in his longtime ally John Clark’s past. With Clark on the run, it’s up to Jack, Jr. to stop a growing threat emerging in the Middle East, where a corrupt Pakistani general has entered into a deadly pact with a fanatical terrorist to procure four nuclear warheads they can use to blackmail any world power into submission or face annihilation.
  1. Threat Vector, by Tom Clancy with Mark Greaney – The Campus has been discovered. And whoever knows they exist knows they can be destroyed. Meanwhile, President Jack Ryan has been swept back into the Oval Office – and his wisdom and courage are needed more desperately than ever.
  2. Command Authority, by Tom Clancy with Mark Greaney – When a family friend of Ryan’s is poisoned by a radioactive agent, the trail leads to Russia. And Jack Ryan Jr. – aided by his compatriots John Clark and the covert warriors of the secretive Campus – must delve into an international conflict thirty years in the making, and finish what his father started.
  3. Support and Defend, by Mark Greaney – Ethan Ross was a mid-level staffer for the National Security Council. Now he’s a wanted fugitive on the run with a microdrive that contains enough information to destroy American intelligence efforts around the world. The CIA is desperate to get the drive back before it’s captured by the Russians or one of the various terrorist groups also vying for it.
  1. Full Force and Effect, by Mark Greaney – A North Korean ICBM crashes into the Sea of Japan. A veteran CIA officer is murdered in Ho Chi Minh City, and a package of forged documents goes missing. The pieces are there, but assembling the puzzle will cost Jack Ryan, Jr., and his fellow Campus agents precious time they don’t have.
  2. Under Fire, by Grant Blackwood – On a mission in Tehran, Jack Ryan, Jr., meets his oldest friend, Seth Gregory. As they part, Seth slips Jack a key, along with a perplexing message. The next day Jack is summoned to an apartment where two men claim Seth has disappeared with funds for a vital intelligence operation. They say he’s turned and leave Jack with a warning: If you hear from Seth, call us. Do not get involved.
  3. Commander in Chief, by Tom Clancy – When the desperate Russian president launches an all-out covert violent offensive in order to push the world into chaos and regain the power his once-mighty country has lost, it’s up to U.S. President Jack Ryan and all of his allies to stop the madman’s grand plan of global conflict and conquest.
  1. Duty and Honor, by Grant Blackwood – Jack Ryan, Jr., is on his own. He’s been ousted from his position at the Campus. As if that’s not bad enough, someone is out for Jack’s blood. The police think that he was just the victim of a mugging, but he knows a professional assassin when he kills one.
  2. True Faith and Allegiance, by Mark Greaney – As more deadly events involving American military and intelligence personnel follow, all over the globe, it becomes clear that there has been some kind of massive information breach and that a wide array of America’s most dangerous enemies have made a weapon of the stolen data. With U.S. intelligence agencies potentially compromised, it’s up to John Clark and the rest of The Campus to track the leak to its source.
  3. Point of Contact, by Mike Maden – Former U.S. Senator Weston Rhodes is a defense contractor with an urgent problem. His company needs someone to look over the books of Dalfan Technologies, a Singapore company-quickly. He turns to his old friend Gerry Hendley for help. Hendley Associates is one of the best financial analysis firms in the country and the cover for The Campus. Rhodes asks for two specific analysts, Jack Ryan Jr., and Paul Brown, a mild-mannered forensic accountant.
  1. Power and Empire, by Marc Cameron – Jack Ryan is dealing with an aggressive challenge from the Chinese government. Pawns are being moved around a global chessboard: an attack on an oil platform, a terrorist strike on an American destroyer, and a storm-tossed American spy ship. It seems that President Zhao is determined to limit Ryan’s choices in the upcoming G20 negotiations. But there are hints that there’s even more going on behind the scene.
  2. Line of Sight, by Mike Maden – Twenty-six years ago, Dr. Cathy Ryan restored the eyesight of a young Bosnian girl who had been injured during an attack in the Bosnian War. Today, her son, Jack Ryan Jr. has agreed to track down the young woman and deliver a letter from his mother. What he finds shocks them both.
  3. Oath of Office, by Marc Cameron – Freedom may have finally arrived in Iran. As protests break out across the country, the media rejoices over the so-called Persian Spring. Western leaders are ecstatic. Members of Congress and the Cabinet clamor to back the rebels. Only President Jack Ryan remains wary. Meanwhile, a deadly strain of flu is ravaging the United States as spring floods decimate the Southeast.
  1. Enemy Contact, by Mike Maden – The CIA’s deepest secrets are being given away for a larger agenda that will undermine the entire Western intelligence community. Director of National Intelligence Mary Pat Foley wants it stopped but doesn’t know who, how, or why. Jack Ryan, Jr., is dispatched to Poland on a different mission. The clues are thin, and the sketchy trail dead-ends in a harrowing fight where he barely escapes with his life.
  2. Code of Honor, by Marc Cameron – Father Pat West, S.J. was a buddy of the young Jack Ryan when they were both undergraduates. Father West left a comfortable to work with the poor in Indonesia. Now he’s been arrested and accused of blasphemy against Islam. President Ryan is desperate to rescue his old friend, but he can’t move officially against the Indonesians. Instead, he relies on the Campus team to find out who is framing the priest.
  3. Firing Point, by Mike Maden – While on vacation in Barcelona, Jack Ryan, Jr. is surprised to run into an old friend at a small café. A first, Renee Moore seems surprised to see Jack. After making plans to meet later, Jack leaves, only to miss the opportunity to ever speak to Renee again, as the café is destroyed minutes later by a suicide bomber. A desperate Jack plunges back into the ruins to save his friend, but it’s too late. As she dies in his arms, she utters one word, “Sammler.”
  1. Shadow of the Dragon, by Marc Cameron – A missing Chinese scientist, unexplained noises emanating from under the Arctic ice, and a possible mole in American intelligence are just some of the problems that plague President Jack Ryan that has only one choice: send John Clark and his Campus team deep into China.
  2. Target Acquired, by Don Bentley – Jack Ryan, Jr. would do anything for Ding Chavez. That’s why Jack is currently sitting in an open-air market in Israel, helping a CIA team with a simple job. The man running the mission, Peter Beltz, is an old friend from Ding’s Army days. Ding hadn’t seen his friend since Peter’s transfer to the CIA eighteen months prior and intended to use the assignment to reconnect. Unfortunately, Ding had to cancel at the last minute and asked Jack to take his place. It’s a cushy assignment–a trip to Israel in exchange for a couple of hours of easy work, but Jack could use the downtime after his last operation.
  3. Chain of Command, by Marc Cameron – An corrupt pharmaceutical billionaire has spent millions supporting radical groups while using the chaos they engender to cover his money-making schemes, but for a man with such towering ambitions, the only real goal is power. To get that, he’ll have to eliminate the only impediment in his path-Jack Ryan. The question is, how do you attack the most closely guarded man in the world?
  1. Zero Hour, by Don Bentley – When the leader of North Korea is catastrophically injured, his incapacitation inadvertently triggers a “dead-man’s switch,” activating an army of sleeper agents in South Korea and precipitating a struggle for succession. Jack Ryan, Jr. is in Seoul to interview a potential addition to the Campus. But his benign trip takes a deadly turn when a wave of violence perpetrated by North Korean operatives grips South Korea’s capital. A mysterious voice from North Korea offers Jack a way to stop the peninsula’s rush to war, but her price may be more than he can afford to pay.
  2. Flash Point, by Don Bentley – Jack Ryan Jr. is in a world of trouble. When a benign surveillance operation takes a deadly turn, Jack finds himself locked in a struggle with an unseen enemy bent on destroying the Campus. The chase leads Jack to the South China Sea where a midair collision between aircraft from rival nations threatens to serve as a flash point for the entire region. As Jack frantically tries to put the pieces of the conspiracy together, the Campus is hit with a crippling attack. When the dust settles, Jack is one of the few operators still standing and the Campus’s de facto leader. But the fight is just beginning.
  3. Weapons Grade, by Don Bentley – The quiet of a Texas night is shattered by the sounds of screeching brakes, crumpling metal and, most shockingly, rapid gunfire. The auto accident Jack Ryan Jr thought he witnessed turned out to be a professional hit. Jack may be too late to save the victim, but he’ll be damned if he’s going to let the hitters escape justice. He’s got just one lead-a meeting the victim was going to. When Jack shows up instead, he’s drawn into the seedy underbelly of a small, Texas town and the cold case of a college student who vanished from its streets.
  1. Command and Control, by Marc Cameron – President Jack Ryan travels to Colombia to support the president who is facing a challenge from autocratic forces. What seems like an ordinary opportunity to preach the values of democracy quickly turns into a nightmare when a full-blown military coup erupts. President Ryan and his Secret Service team are cut off and out of communication. In Washington, the Vice President is coordinating a military response, but there’s still one more obstacle. The Russians recognize an opportunity when one presents itself. They’ve hired a private military contractor to do the unthinkable–use the cover of the coup to assassinate President Jack Ryan.
  2. Act of Defiance, by Brian Andrews & Jeffrey Wilson – According to US intelligence, something is happening in Russia. The Navy appears to be investing heavily on some covert project, despite the fact that its ground troops have been destroyed by inefficiency and corruption. Analysts are perplexed until Katie Ryan, the youngest daughter of President Jack Ryan, who works for the Office of Naval Intelligence, unravels the conundrum. Similar to her father, she recognizes patterns where others don’t, and she has come to the conclusion that the Russians are ready to launch the Belgorod, a supermissile submarine. The hunt is now on to locate the sub and establish whether it represents a danger to the US mainland.
  3. Shadow State, by M.P. Woodward – Jack Ryan, Jr. finds himself cut off from his comrades at The Campus just when he needs them most. He’s smack dab in the middle of an international conspiracy, and this may be too much for even he to handle. 

The Jack Ryan Books in Order of Publication

  1. The Hunt for Red October (1984)
  2. Patriot Games (1987)
  3. The Cardinal of the Kremlin (1988)
  4. Clear and Present Danger (1989)
  5. The Sum of All Fears (1991)
  6. Without Remorse (1993)
  7. Debt of Honor (1994)
  8. Executive Orders (1996)
  9. Rainbow Six (1998)
  10. The Bear and the Dragon (2000)
  11. Red Rabbit (2002)
  12. The Teeth of the Tiger (2003)
  13. Dead or Alive (2010)
  14. Locked On (2011)
  15. Threat Vector (2012)
  16. Command Authority (2013)
  17. Support and Defend (2014)
  18. Full Force and Effect (2014)
  19. Under Fire (2015)
  20. Commander in Chief (2015)
  21. Duty and Honor (2016)
  22. True Faith and Allegiance (2016)
  23. Point of Contact (2017)
  24. Power and Empire (2017)
  25. Line of Sight (2018)
  26. Oath of Office (2018)
  27. Enemy Contact (2019)
  28. Code of Honor (2019)
  29. Firing Point (2020)
  30. Shadow of the Dragon (2020)
  31. Target Acquired (2021)
  32. Chain of Command (2021)
  33. Zero Hour (2022)
  34. Red Winter (2022)
  35. Flash Point (2023)
  36. Weapons Grade (2023)
  37. Command and Control (2023)
  38. Act of Defiance (2024)
  39. Shadow State (2024)

See Also: The Tom Clancy’s OP Center series

If you like our article about reading Jack Ryan series in order, don’t forget to bookmark it! You may also be interested in the Gray Man series by Mark Greaney, the Mitch Rapp series by Vince Flynn, the Scot Harvath series by Brad Thor, Cotton Malone series by Steve Berry.

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63 Comments

  1. Hi
    Thanks for making the reading list order. I hunted for this many years ago and didn’t find it. I made my own … but it wasn’t as complete as yours. I don’t know if you have contact with the managing editor for Jack Ryan. Something that would be absolutely wonderful would be a pdf (better yet a data base) which has ALL of the Jack Ryan series that Clancy actually wrote (vs. those those authors which are extending the series.). Then a person could search, like a concordance for the bible, for all the details. One of Clancy’s strengths beyond most authors is his ability to establish a character and build them throughout the whole series. They become friends, co-workers, enemies of the reader. Every few years I read all the novels in chronology order from Without Remorse to the last. Thanks again.

  2. Thank you so much for putting these in order for us, but there is one book which I am confused as to where it belongs in either the Jack Ryan or Jack Ryan Jr. universe, and that is “Against All Enemies”. Can you tell us where you think this one belongs.

    Many Thanks
    Domingo

    1. Against all Enemies is not a complete stand alone like Red Storm Rising. Against All Enemies introduces Max Moore as a character (who would’ve also appeared in the canceled Search and Destroy) into the Ryanverse. At the end Dominic Caruso from the Campus makes an appearance and attempts to recruit Moore thus placing the book in the Ryanverse.

  3. Thank You for putting the list order of tom clancy’s jack ryan series, now i can complete my reading collection. It would be deeply appreciated if one of these days you could also make it an on line reading.

  4. I would also like to say thanks a lot. Just started reading the books again. This time one right after the other.

    Another great author was Vince Flynn with the Mitch Rapp series. Plan to read them after I finish with the Jack Ryan books.

    As for against all enemies, that is a stand alone book. Pretty sure Jack Ryan is not in it.

  5. hi. is there any chance that the entire collection will be available on kindle, as at present only a few are . regards bob.

    1. Hey Bob, Don’t know about kindle but they are all available through Barnes & Noble in the Nook format. They have an app also so you don’t have to buy a new device unless you have the Kindle itself.

  6. Thank you for the reading order.

    There seems to be a big gap between the latter half of his presidency, Robbie taking over, getting killed, etc, etc.

    Did I miss a book, or was this in the era when he was getting sick, ???

    Thanks

  7. Is the TV show for real? I’d seriously love to see a movie featuring The Campus now, long overdue

  8. In one book of the Jack Ryan Jr series, Gavin said to Jack something about jacks never having read a specific, and I assume techno thriller, author . Anyone remember that author’s name?

  9. Currently re-reading the Jack Ryan novels, and I’m thinking ‘Red Rabbit’ should actually be #2 instead of ‘Patriot Games’: ‘Red Rabbit’s story runs in the early 80s, whereas in ‘Patriot Games’ there is a description about an electrician reading a fuxe box’s inspection tag dating 1919, contemplating that that is almost 70 years ago, i.e. that scene is taking place around 1989, so years after when everything in Red Rabbit takes place…

    1. True, but in Red Rabbit, they refer to Jack as Sir John. He was knighted in Patriot Games.

  10. Currently reading OATH OF OFFICE; clearly a Jack Ryan era novel, but it is unlisted in the reading order. Where should it be placed?

  11. I’ve been wanting to read through Tom Clancy’s novel for a while. Years ago I read Patriot Games and Clear And Present Danger. Wanting to read all of his works, I’m trying to decide if I want to start with the order of publication or chronological order.

    I’m thinking if I had read them back in the day it would have been Chronological of course.

    1. You have probably read them all by now – compulsive stuff!
      Do enough research on the correct order
      [one of them is a prequel it seems]
      and then enjoy . . . !

  12. That’s the publication order – many thanks.
    I have a list from somewhere else that has guided me too.

    How about a list of reading order?
    A number of comments above note tenuous links to Ryan and co
    and it would be useful to have them in the list, suitably annotated.

    PS
    For those who like Clancy books,
    try also those of Jeffery Deaver,
    but do get the order correct.
    (multiple series and characters from one appear in another)

  13. I thought red rabbit is a late prequel to the Ryan series , ie before H.F.R.O. , and patriot games? Or is patriot games a prequel to red rabbit?

  14. Thanks so much for posting both the publication and chronological order of the Jack Ryan series. I’ve wanted to attack these books for years, but wasn’t certain of the reading order. Now that you have provided it, I have downloaded #1 in the series from the Cloud Library of my local library, Windsor Public Library. I’m revved up, and ready to read! Your organization and formatting (on this site) are magnificent, especially since you’ve included the actual book covers of the entire series. You are the bibliophile’s “Perfectionist”, to say the least! I can only aspire to become as organized as you are. Many thanks for taking the time and making the effort to do such a thorough job!
    A fan from Windsor/Essex County, Ontario, Canada

  15. Hi everyone, I’ve read the first 12 books by publishing date, that is, the books that Clancy wrote alone with no co-author or anyone else carrying on the story for him. I’m a little hesitant to continue on and am wondering if anyone else has noticed a decline in the quality with the later books with co-authors or just different authors altogether. Is it worth it to read the later ones (#13 “Dead or Alive” would be next for me) or should I move on?

    Obviously, everyone has their own tastes and preferences, and that’s great, and I’m also sure that the other authors are good writers, but there can also be a certain something that gets lost when another person carries on the story and I’m curious if there’s a general consensus among readers like us who like Clancy enough to look search out a list like this. Thanks in advance for your thoughts.

    1. I have ready several of the “new” books. The differences are mainly in writer style. Clancy dug into the characters thoughts, how they react etc. The new writer’s do not give you the depth of character development.

    2. No one writes the same way so it’s hard to say I have read them all some more than once but I loved the books he wrote alone and the old characters !!!!!

    3. I am currently re-reading Tom Clancey hard covered books and am doing so as they were written. I am currently making a list of the joint author paperback series and want to acquire them again. So over 20-30 years I’ve enjoyed every book and paperback. This is my third attempt to form a collection. When I lived in Hawaii I collected the books from the Goodwill and Salvation stores. I kept on a budgetspwnding$2.99 for hard covered books and $1.99 for paperbacks. Had a large collection then.

    4. Any books that Mark Greaney is involved with are top class.
      Greaney is the modern day Clancy and at the top of the tree for spy thriller action books.

  16. Hi Jason.

    None of the co-authored or continuation books have the brilliant level of military research that Tom put into his personally authored novels. For that reason alone they stand head and shoulders over the others.

    My personal favoutites are Red October and the Bear and the Dragon.

    The co-authored books are still very good but, unsurprisingly, the continuation works are a mixed bag.

    Tom Clancy died tragically young – I have always felt an affinity with him, although we sadly never met. I was an Insurance Agent with a strong interest in Naval history and military technology. I and am currently two years older than Tom when he died. Like him, I also have an affection for BB61, The battleship Iowa which I had the great priviledge of having a guided tour over when she visited The Royal Navy’s Portsmouth Dockyard.

    Tom is sadly missed. RIP.

  17. I’m a dedicated Tom Clancy fan and so happy his characters are carrying on in spite of Tom’s untimely death. I have a question. In the first books about The Campus and Jack, Jr. it appears that Jack, Sr. have given up the presidency and his old friend, Robbie Jackson, was running but was assassinated – and President Kealty was elected. Jack, Sr. also established The Campus before leaving office; however, I have never been able to find the book where all this took place. Is there such a book? Or just the above references to these happenings?

  18. Yeah…. I have 28 Tom Clancy books that I am re-reading concerning Jack and Jack Jr (I got the order from this website) and I just got thru with THe Bear and the Dragon and next would be The Teeth of the Tiger and it mentions what Marilon Bodner said above. I was on page 64 where it mentions how Sr. had really missed Robby Jackson, and that Robby had been assassinated by the Ku Klux Klan guy, and a few paragraphs further how Kealty had become president (the one that had originally resigned his Vice Presidency when Ryan Sr became president since he was the only one that had not been killed in the bombing attach by the Japanese on the capital building, etc). So… there will be a book to shoe horn between the Bear and the Dragon and the Teeth of the TIger to come out in June 2021. Good to know!!!

  19. Several of the latest books mention that John Clark lives in Virginia. When did this happen? I thought he moved to a farm near Thurmont, Maryland after he was nearly killed. I know that The Campus building was attacked and then they moved to Alexandria, Virginia, and Jack Ryan, Jr. also moved to Alexandria to shorten his commute, but I don’t recall reading where John Clark also moved to Virginia. I have read all 30 of the books. Unfortunately, I read Patriot Games thru Debt of Honor back in the 90s and then picked up with Executive Orders thru Shadow of the Dragon during Covid. In retrospect, I wish that I had started over before Executive Orders, but I just finished Patriot Games and will read thru to Debt of Honor.

    1. In without remorse it says that Sandy moved to northern Virginia and the her and John are expecting in the very last chapter

  20. I just finished Shadow of the Dragon, the latest …. It was different but still hard to put down….. Now I wait until next year for the next one…arggg

  21. i would really like to begin reading through Jack Ryan novels, but I note that I am unable to purchase the first book at present? So what options are there then to get started?
    Regards
    Miles Anderson

  22. We travel a lot and check out audio books from the library. On our most recent trip (first one in 15 months – and everyone knows why), we listened to True Faith and Allegiance and Full Force and Effect. We found that about 1/2 of True Faith and Allegiance was just repeats of Full Force and Effect. However, very different final chapters.

  23. Web page could use an edit. I’m sure you mean revolve, not RESOLVE.

    Without Remorse, by Tom Clancy – This novel doesn’t RESOLVE around Jack Ryan, but John Clark. Set during the Vietnam War, in the city of Baltimore, the book tells the origin of Clark and alternates between two major story arcs.

  24. A question about the books post-Clancy. With all of these different authors writing them, do they collaborate with each other so that there is a continued thread?
    Thanks

  25. I get that the co-authored and post Clancy books have a totally different voice, but does anyone else get really annoyed when there are continuity errors? For example, in “Locked On”, it describes Clark’s broken Russian (previously, he spoke perfect Russian with a native St. Petersburg accent), or in the following book, “Threat Vector”, it lists Jack Jr as the eldest child of the president. These are BIG errors. I’m shocked they were missed.

    1. Has anyone noticed the similarities from Commander and Chief… And what is going on in Ukraine right now. Oligarch trying to protect his ill-gotten Gaines from his gov as well as the world and using invasion of country next to it. Russia and Belrussians.? And the deep connection of Deutches Bank Mirror trades and foreign gov. Against the west. Like Russia. And use of Bitcoin currency.

  26. I am merely pointing out similarities to the novel and what is happening today. I am not a terrorist. I just found it very interesting. Just like Dark Towers. I have had personal experience with Deutches. They are very dirty. And very similar to Spectre from James Bond. There reach is everywhere.. as a real victim of mortgage fraud and violence lies fraud we have been living in true Tom Clancy novel. Just curious if anyone felt the same. I am a huge fan of these novels and movies. And audio books.

    1. @Carla Walters, Absolutely! Russia attacking Lithuania (irl it was Ukraine) is what caught my attention first. There are several I’ve noticed but my memory has let me down as to what the others were. I think N. Korea or something about it was another.

  27. Looking at your list, I agree, it is missing Against All Enemies . Why was this major Tom Clancy book left off the list? I checked a different source of chronology, and they left it off too. Please explain.

    1. In “Against All Enemies,” there’s one character from the Ryanverse, but the events depicted in the book are of no consequence to the rest of the series. Also, the sequel was canceled, we never know if the book was going to be firmly connected to the Ryanverse or not. In the end, the book is for most readers considered a standalone, like Red Storm Rising, not part of the main Clancy series.

    2. @Fabien, agreed! I would love to see a list of Op-Center books in Chronological order.
      Am I wrong or were there more rainbow six novels? If so, I wish there was a list for that as well.

    1. Sorry about that, I clearly needed to make an update. I also added the next Jack Ryan Jr. to the list. I’ll see later if there are adjustments to make. Don’t hesitate to leave a comment if I forgot or misplaced anything.

      Have a good read!

  28. Thank you for this and keeping it up to date. Without Remorse and Sum of All Fears so far are my favorites. Starting Debt of Honor now.

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