John Ringo bibliography

This is complete list by American military science fiction writer John Ringo.

Bibliography

Series

Black Tide Rising

Series based on a zombie apocalypse, but dealing with living, near-rabid, infected humans rather than the living dead. The story centers around a family of survivalists (mother, father, and two teenage daughters) who get early warning of the plague and escape by boat, only to realize that they are the best hope for others stranded at sea.

Troy Rising

Main article: Troy Rising

Legacy of the Aldenata

Also known as the "Posleen Series" and "Posleen War Series"[1] after the name of the invading species besetting and successfully conquering much of Earth.

Posleen War—Central storyline
Hedren War
Posleen War sidestories
Cally's War spinoff series

Co-written with Julie Cochrane, this series is more cloak and dagger spy genre fiction as the humans strive to overcome the game rigged by the Darhel race that has the rest of the galaxy's races in virtual thralldom—except for the Posleen and humans whom they fear. The Darhel systematically use humans to combat the Posleen, while bleeding the humans when and wherever possible by underhanded clandestine acts to weaken the future options of humanity.

Spinoff books
This sequel is set about a millennium after the other main Posleen series works.

Empire of Man

Main article: Empire of Man

Also known as the "Prince Roger Series"

Co-written with David Weber, with multiple books still under contract

  1. March Upcountry (May 2001) (ISBN 0-671-31985-X)
  2. March to the Sea (Aug 2001) (ISBN 0-671-31826-8)
  3. March to the Stars (2003) (ISBN 0-7434-3562-1)
  4. We Few (2005) (ISBN 0-7434-9881-X)
Omnibus collections
  1. Empire of Man (February 2014) ISBN 1476736243; collects March Upcountry and March to the Sea
  2. Throne of Stars (August 2014) (ISBN 978-1-4767-3666-2);[2] collects March to the Stars and We Few

The Council Wars

Main article: The Council Wars

Paladin of Shadows

This is a series of contemporary era techno-thrillers, much like Tom Clancy's works but with less politics and a closer to the ground level and action focus.

Ringo has stated that these novels stem from a nagging idea between contracted books. He believed the concept was too over-the-top and offensive to be of much interest to his usual audience, and so wrote the first book with no intention of publishing it, as a way to get the idea out of his head. However, during interactions with fans, he mentioned the unpublished story and was surprised that the premise was met with enthusiasm.[3] The Paladin of Shadows series contain graphic scenes of bondage, torture, and underage (by United States law) sex, as Ringo's protagonist's anti-terrorism missions butt heads with harsh economic realities of commercial sexual slavery in Eastern Europe and its connection to funding arms for terrorist organizations.

The central hero, Michael Harmon (A.K.A. Mike Jenkins, A.K.A. Ghost), is a self-proclaimed sadist, repressed rapist, former United States Navy Boatswain's Mate 1st Class, and a trainer of US Navy SEALs. After a class, he hides in the bushes to ogle the women on the campus of the University of Georgia. While there, he witnesses a woman being kidnapped. He impulsively follows the kidnapper and rescues several abducted women and earns the gratitude of several nations, a small fortune, and a series of high-level political connections in the process of experiencing a life change. The work is, in fact, three connected anti-terrorism novellas spanning about a year, backstory omitted from the last two, where 'Jenkins' takes on a certain James Bond-style sole operator/loose cannon role. The work features scenes involving the interception of two nuclear devices, saving Paris and Washington, D.C., while featuring a travelogue through part of the seamier sides of the Balkans and European parts of the former Soviet Union.

In the second work, he buys an estate in eastern Europe (the country of Georgia to be specific) that has an entailed ancient warrior tribe, called the Keldera, who bestow on him the honorific "The Kildar" (Warlord, Baron, or similar title). The Keldera aid him in reducing tensions in the Caucasus. Again the book shows a life transition, this time from a sole shooter to a local, politically connected, warlord. In subsequent books, the tribe, now being trained up into a superb light company, goes operational and is employed as a deniable black ops force by the United States for the next several works. By A Deeper Blue, some of the Keldaran force has been trained in both SCUBA and HALO jumps; while Tiger by the Tail shows the force on an extended training mission in the Pacific gradually being trained en toto as a force equivalent to U.S. Navy SEAL Teamsbut with Company strength.

Other major/recurring characters in the Paladin of Shadows series include Charles Adams, a retired SEAL Master Chief, intel specialist and former USMC Sergeant Patrick Vanner, United States Army War College graduate Colonel David Nielson, a retired Special Ops Civil Affairs Specialist who serves as Mike's de facto Chief of Staff and the only American officer on his senior staff, Captains Kasey Bathlick and Tamara Wilson (call signs Dragon and Valkryie), two Marine Corps helicopter pilots, Captain John Hardesty, a charter pilot for Chatham Aviation in England/former Royal Air Force Major/Squadron leader who frequently flies Mike around the globe, Colonel Bob Pierson, the Office of Strategic Operations Liaison at the Pentagon who serves as one of Mike's primary contacts within the United States government, 2nd Lieutenant Britney "Bambi" Harder, who was rescued by Mike in "Ghost" and by "A Deeper Blue" is a junior intelligence officer at United States Special Operations Command Headquarters, MacDill Air Force Base, Florida, Anastasia Rakovitch, a masochistic 26-year-old Russian-born woman given to the Kildar by an Uzbek sheikh who now serves as his harem manager, Daria Koroleva, the Kildar's personal assistant, Katya "Cottontail" Ivanova, the sociopathic man-hating whore-turned-spy and assassin, and David and Amanda Cliff, the President and First Lady of the United States.

Voyage of the Space Bubble

Also called the Looking Glass series

All books titles in the series are phrases taken from the poem "Jabberwocky", which is mentioned repeatedly in the later novels.

Special Circumstances

Monster Hunter Memoirs

Co-written with Larry Correia

A prequel series set in the Monster Hunter International universe during the 1980's.

Non-series novels

Short stories

References

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