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Maze Runner Books In Order

Below is the complete list of Maze Runner books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series by James Dashner.

Maze Runner Series

  1. The Maze Runner (2009)
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  2. The Scorch Trials (2010)
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  3. The Death Cure (2011)
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  4. The Kill Order (2012)
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  5. The Fever Code (2016)
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Maze Runner Short Stories/Novellas Series

  1. Crank Palace (2020)
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Maze Runner Collections Series

  1. The Maze Runner Files (2013)
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About Maze Runner Series

James Dashner’s Maze Runner books look simple at first glance, but the order matters more than it might seem because the series is built in layers. The original core trilogy is The Maze Runner, The Scorch Trials, and The Death Cure, and that remains the central story of Thomas, Teresa, Minho, Newt, and the other Gladers. Official publisher pages still present those three books as the opening arc, with The Kill Order and The Fever Code following as the fourth and fifth books in the broader Maze Runner series.

That distinction between core trilogy and expanded series is the first useful thing to understand. The Maze Runner works as a brutal, tightly focused survival novel: memory erased, rules half-understood, danger everywhere, and a mystery that keeps withholding just enough to stay urgent. The Scorch Trials then widens the world, shifting the books from enclosed survival puzzle into a larger post-apocalyptic thriller. The Death Cure completes that first movement by turning the series fully toward WICKED, the ethics of experimentation, and the cost of whatever “cure” or future this ruined world might still offer. Read in publication order, those three books have a very clear escalation. Each one expands the scale without losing the pressure that made the first novel work.

What makes the series durable is not just the maze concept itself, but the way Dashner builds tension from uncertainty. Thomas is a good center for that because he is never simply the strongest or most informed person in the room. He is defined by instinct, loyalty, and a stubborn refusal to accept the world’s explanations at face value. Around him, the other Gladers matter far more than background cast usually do in this kind of dystopian fiction. Minho, Newt, Teresa, and the larger group give the series its emotional texture. The books are full of pursuit, experiments, and collapsing systems, but they last because the friendships, betrayals, and shifting trust lines keep carrying the story forward.

Publication order is usually the best reading experience because The Kill Order and The Fever Code are both prequels, but they are not the best entry point for most readers. The publisher’s boxed sets and series pages place them after the main trilogy, and that makes sense. The Kill Order reaches back into the origins of the catastrophe, while The Fever Code reveals how the Maze itself was constructed and how Thomas and WICKED were tied together before the first book began. Both are more powerful once the reader already knows what those revelations are answering. Starting with the prequels may make the timeline neater, but it weakens the mystery that gave the original trilogy its force.

There is also a structural point that helps clarify the franchise. James Dashner’s official site now separates The Maze Runner Series from The Maze Cutter Series, which means the newer continuation books belong to a related follow-on line rather than to the original five-book Maze Runner sequence. That is useful for readers who want the clean order of the main series first. The original Maze Runner books have a complete shape of their own: trilogy first, then the two prequels.

For readers who already have the list above, the best way to think about The Maze Runner is as a dystopian series that begins in confusion and confinement, then gradually reveals how much larger and more morally compromised the world really is. Read in publication order, the books move from survival mystery to institutional conspiracy to origin-story clarification. That progression is what gives the series its punch. The maze is the hook, but the real story is about control, memory, loyalty, and the terrifying possibility that the people trying to save the world may have already destroyed too much of it.

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