Below is the complete list of Daniel Silva’s Gabriel Allon books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Gabriel Allon Series
- The Kill Artist (2001)
View Book - The English Assassin (2002)
View Book - The Confessor (2002)
View Book - A Death in Vienna (2003)
View Book - Prince of Fire (2005)
View Book - The Messenger (2006)
View Book - The Secret Servant (2007)
View Book - Moscow Rules (2008)
View Book - The Defector (2009)
View Book - The Rembrandt Affair (2010)
View Book - Portrait of a Spy (2011)
View Book - The Fallen Angel (2012)
View Book - The English Girl (2013)
View Book - The Heist (2014)
View Book - The English Spy (2015)
View Book - The Black Widow (2016)
View Book - House of Spies (2017)
View Book - The Other Woman (2018)
View Book - The New Girl (2019)
View Book - The Order (2020)
View Book - The Cellist (2021)
View Book - Portrait of an Unknown Woman (2022)
View Book - The Collector (2023)
View Book - A Death in Cornwall (2024)
View Book - An Inside Job (2025)
View Book - Ransom (2026)
View Book
About Gabriel Allon Series
Daniel Silva’s Gabriel Allon series begins as espionage fiction with an art-restoration twist and gradually becomes something larger: a long-running international thriller sequence in which intelligence work, political violence, history, and culture all fold into the life of one unusually durable protagonist. Official series listings place The Kill Artist first and show the line continuing through A Death in Cornwall, with Ransom announced as the twenty-sixth Gabriel Allon novel for July 14, 2026.
What makes Gabriel distinct from many modern spy heroes is the tension built into his identity. He is not only an intelligence operative. Daniel Silva’s official and publisher materials consistently frame him as an art restorer as well as a legendary spy, and that dual role is one of the defining features of the series. It gives the books a different texture from more purely procedural or military thrillers. Gabriel moves through museums, churches, private collections, and old European cities as naturally as he moves through the machinery of covert action. The result is a series in which geopolitics and cultural history often matter at the same time, and where the recovery of a painting can feel as charged as the pursuit of a terrorist.
Publication order matters here because Gabriel Allon is not a static franchise character. The early novels establish him in a more classic spy-thriller mode, with assassination, intelligence tradecraft, and Middle Eastern and European political tensions close to the foreground. As the series develops, the books widen in both scale and emphasis. Terror networks, Russian power, Vatican intrigue, the international art world, and questions of leadership and succession all become more important over time. By the later novels, Gabriel is not simply an operative passing through crises. He has become the central intelligence figure around whom entire operations and political calculations turn. Reading the books in order lets that evolution feel earned rather than assumed.
Another reason order matters is that Silva writes with stronger continuity than many thriller writers do. These books may deliver a complete mission or conspiracy in each volume, but the relationships, loyalties, losses, and institutional changes carry forward. The shift from titles like The English Assassin and The Confessor into later novels such as The Black Widow, House of Spies, The Order, Portrait of an Unknown Woman, The Collector, A Death in Cornwall, and the forthcoming Ransom shows a series that keeps reinventing its immediate concerns while still deepening one long arc around Gabriel himself.
The tone is also a large part of the appeal. Gabriel Allon books are polished, worldly thrillers. They are interested in violence, certainly, but they are equally interested in elegance, memory, religion, art, and the lingering force of European history. That gives them a more cultivated atmosphere than many action-driven espionage series. Silva has always liked high stakes, but he also likes old institutions and symbolic objects, which is why a papal death in The Order or a missing masterpiece in A Death in Cornwall fits the series so naturally.
For readers who already have the list above, the key thing to know is that Gabriel Allon is best read as one sustained progression rather than a stack of interchangeable spy adventures. The main pleasure is not only watching a brilliant operative solve the latest crisis. It is watching Silva expand a character from lethal field asset into a figure carrying history, responsibility, and cultural memory with him wherever he goes. That is why publication order pays off. The series grows steadily broader, more confident, and more layered, while still holding onto the central paradox that made Gabriel compelling in the first place: a man shaped by secrecy and violence, yet repeatedly drawn back toward civilization, restoration, and things meant to endure.