Home > Gregg Hurwitz > Series: Orphan X

Orphan X Books in Order

Below is the complete list of Orphan X books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series by Gregg Hurwitz.

Orphan X / Evan Smoak Series

  1. Orphan X (2016)
    Buy on Amazon
  2. Buy a Bullet (Short Story) (2016)
    Buy on Amazon
  3. The Nowhere Man (2017)
    Buy on Amazon
  4. Hellbent (2018)
    Buy on Amazon
  5. The Intern (Short Story) (2018)
    Buy on Amazon
  6. Out of the Dark (2019)
    Buy on Amazon
  7. Into the Fire (2020)
    Buy on Amazon
  8. The List (Short Story) (2020)
    Buy on Amazon
  9. Prodigal Son (2021)
    Buy on Amazon
  10. Dark Horse (2022)
    Buy on Amazon
  11. The Last Orphan (2023)
    Buy on Amazon
  12. The Recital (Short Story) (2023)
    Buy on Amazon
  13. Lone Wolf (2024)
    Buy on Amazon
  14. Nemesis (2025)
    Buy on Amazon
  15. The Code (2025)
    Buy on Amazon
  16. Antihero (2026)
    Buy on Amazon

About Orphan X Series

Gregg Hurwitz’s Orphan X series is built around one of the cleanest thriller premises of the last decade: Evan Smoak, taken from a group home at twelve and trained in the secret Orphan Program to become a deniable government assassin, breaks away and reinvents himself as the Nowhere Man, using those same skills to help desperate people who have nowhere else to turn. That setup gives the series its core tension from the start. Evan is both rescuer and weapon, a man trying to live by a personal code while carrying the habits, reflexes, and damage of a life designed to erase normal human attachment.

What makes the books work is that Hurwitz does not treat Evan as a generic action hero. He is highly competent, but the series is equally interested in what competence costs. Evan’s training made him almost unnaturally effective, yet it also left him isolated, rigid, and unsure how to build an ordinary life. Across the series, that conflict becomes just as important as the external missions. The novels deliver the expected action, tradecraft, pursuit, and survival mechanics, but they also keep returning to questions of morality, identity, and whether a man shaped for violence can create something like decency out of the ruins of that past.

Publication order matters here because Orphan X is not a flat franchise where each book resets the hero to the same emotional position. The early novels establish Evan’s methods and the legend of the Nowhere Man, but the series quickly becomes more cumulative than that. Enemies recur, personal loyalties deepen, and Evan’s own understanding of his past and obligations continues to change. The official Macmillan series page presents the books as one ongoing line of “high-octane action” novels centered on Evan Smoak, and the current series run shows a clear progression from Orphan X through The Nowhere Man, Hellbent, Out of the Dark, Into the Fire, Prodigal Son, Dark Horse, The Last Orphan, Lone Wolf, Nemesis, and Antihero. Read in order, that progression feels earned rather than episodic.

Another reason order helps is the way Hurwitz expands the series without losing its central identity. The books begin with a strong lone-operator structure, but later entries complicate Evan’s world with longer consequences, more personal entanglements, and a deeper examination of the rules he lives by. The appeal is not only that he can outfight or outthink opponents. It is that the novels keep testing the limits of his code. Who deserves saving? What does justice look like when institutions fail? How much of Evan Smoak can be separated from Orphan X? Those questions give the series more continuity than a simple mission-of-the-week setup would suggest.

There are also shorter works connected to the series, including Buy a Bullet, The Intern, The List, The Recital, and The Code. These sit between the novels and add context, but they do not replace the main line of books. For most readers, the novels remain the backbone of the experience, while the shorter pieces function as supplements for readers who want more of Evan’s world and voice.

For readers who already have the list above, the main thing to know is that Orphan X is best approached as a modern thriller series with a genuine long arc, not just a stack of interchangeable action novels. The hook is immediate, but the staying power comes from character accumulation. Hurwitz keeps the books fast and hard-edged, yet underneath the action he is writing about discipline, damage, solitude, and the attempt to turn lethal training toward something almost ethical. That is why publication order pays off. You are not only watching Evan survive. You are watching him try, book by book, to decide what kind of man survival has left behind.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *