Jack Ryan, Jr. Books in Order

Below is the complete list of Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan, Jr. books in order. For this series, the chronological reading order is the same as the order of publication.

Publication Order of Jack Ryan, Jr. / Campus Books

  1. The Teeth of the Tiger (2003)
    by Tom Clancy
    The Teeth of the Tiger was published in 2003 and is listed as book #1 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  2. Dead or Alive (2010)
    (With Grant Blackwood)
    by Tom Clancy
    Published in 2010, Dead or Alive is listed as book #2 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  3. Against All Enemies (2011)
    (With Peter Telep)
    by Tom Clancy
    Against All Enemies is a 2011 release and appears as book #3 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  4. Locked On (2011)
    (With Mark Greaney)
    by Tom Clancy
    In the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, Locked On is book #4 and was published in 2011.
  5. Threat Vector (2012)
    (With Mark Greaney)
    by Tom Clancy
    Threat Vector was first published in 2012; within the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, it is listed as book #5.
  6. Command Authority (2013)
    (With Mark Greaney)
    by Tom Clancy
    Command Authority was published in 2013 and is listed as book #6 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  7. Support and Defend (2014)
    (By Mark Greaney)
    Published in 2014, Support and Defend is listed as book #7 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  8. Full Force and Effect (2014)
    (By Mark Greaney)
    Full Force and Effect is a 2014 release and appears as book #8 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  9. Under Fire (2015)
    (By Grant Blackwood)
    In the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, Under Fire is book #9 and was published in 2015.
  10. Duty and Honor (2016)
    (By Grant Blackwood)
    Duty and Honor was first published in 2016; within the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, it is listed as book #10.
  11. Point of Contact (2017)
    (By Mike Maden)
    Point of Contact was published in 2017 and is listed as book #11 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  12. Line of Sight (2018)
    (By Mike Maden)
    Published in 2018, Line of Sight is listed as book #12 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  13. Enemy Contact (2019)
    (By Mike Maden)
    Enemy Contact is a 2019 release and appears as book #13 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  14. Firing Point (2020)
    (By Mike Maden)
    In the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, Firing Point is book #14 and was published in 2020.
  15. Target Acquired (2021)
    (By Don Bentley)
    Target Acquired was first published in 2021; within the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, it is listed as book #15.
  16. Zero Hour (2022)
    (By Don Bentley)
    Zero Hour was published in 2022 and is listed as book #16 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  17. Flash Point (2023)
    (By Don Bentley)
    Published in 2023, Flash Point is listed as book #17 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  18. Weapons Grade (2023)
    (By Don Bentley)
    Weapons Grade is a 2023 release and appears as book #18 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  19. Shadow State (2024)
    (By M.P. Woodward)
    In the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, Shadow State is book #19 and was published in 2024.
  20. Line of Demarcation (2025)
    (By M.P. Woodward)
    Line of Demarcation was first published in 2025; within the Jack Ryan, Jr. series, it is listed as book #20.
  21. Terminal Velocity (2025)
    (By M.P. Woodward)
    Terminal Velocity was published in 2025 and is listed as book #21 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.
  22. Pressure Depth (2026)
    (By Jack Stewart)
    Published in 2026, Pressure Depth is listed as book #22 in the Jack Ryan, Jr. series.

About Jack Ryan, Jr.

Jack Ryan, Jr. occupies an interesting place in the larger Tom Clancy universe because he is both heir and disruption. He comes from the most established family in the Ryan saga, but his books are not simply a younger echo of the earlier Jack Ryan novels. They shift the center of gravity away from the Cold War policy rooms, military command structures, and presidential burdens that defined much of Clancy’s original work, and toward something leaner, more mobile, and more covert. Jack Jr. is tied to the same world, but his stories run on different energy. They are built around deniable operations, fieldwork, intelligence gathering, and the moral ambiguity that comes with working in the shadows.

The key institutional link is the Campus, the off-the-books intelligence organization that becomes the operational home for Jack Jr. and for the Caruso brothers, Dominic and Brian. That setup matters because it explains why these novels feel distinct even when they overlap with the broader Ryan continuity. The Campus gives the series room to move away from formal state power and into a more agile thriller mode. In practical terms, that means the books often feel closer to modern espionage adventures than to the large-scale geopolitical procedurals associated with the earliest Clancy novels. The stakes are still international, but the storytelling becomes more immediate and personal.

Jack Jr. first emerges as a significant figure in The Teeth of the Tiger, where the next generation comes into focus and the Campus begins to matter as more than background architecture. From there, the branch that develops around him gradually becomes one of the main engines of the later Ryanverse. That evolution is important to understanding the books. Jack Jr. is not a side character who happens to inherit the name. He becomes one of the franchise’s major working protagonists, especially as the series moves through the post-Clancy continuation novels written with or by other authors in the same publishing line.

What makes Jack Jr. effective as a lead is that he carries some of his father’s intelligence and moral seriousness without duplicating his role. He is not a statesman, strategist, or symbolic national figure in the same sense. He is much closer to the ground. He reads people, adapts under pressure, and moves through hostile environments where formal authority is limited and judgment has to be immediate. That difference gives the books their identity. The older Jack Ryan novels often ask what responsible power looks like at the highest levels. The Jack Ryan, Jr. books ask what responsibility looks like when action has to happen before official systems can respond cleanly.

The tone of the series reflects that shift. These are brisker, more kinetic books, usually structured around pursuit, infiltration, surveillance, and split-second decisions. At the same time, they still belong to the Clancy tradition of procedural detail and international threat analysis. The later continuation authors each bring slightly different emphases, but the overall shape remains recognizable: intelligence-driven suspense, global pressure points, and a hero who must balance patriotism with the realities of secret work. That continuity of atmosphere helps keep the line coherent even as the bylines expand beyond Tom Clancy himself.

For readers who already have the full list above, the best way to think about the Jack Ryan, Jr. books is as a later-generation corridor through the Ryanverse rather than a fully isolated series. They are connected, but their appeal lies in the fact that they tighten the lens. Instead of watching history move from the top down, these novels often show danger at eye level. Jack Jr. inherits the world his father helped define, but his stories are about surviving it one operation at a time.

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