Below is the complete list of Clive Cussler’s NUMA Files books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
NUMA Files Books in Publication Order
- Serpent (1999)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - Blue Gold (2000)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - Fire Ice (2002)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - White Death (2003)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - Lost City (2004)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - Polar Shift (2005)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - The Navigator (2007)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - Medusa (2009)
(With Paul Kemprecos)
View Book - Devil’s Gate (2011)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - The Storm (2012)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Zero Hour (2013)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Ghost Ship (2014)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - The Pharaoh’s Secret (2015)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Nighthawk (2017)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - The Rising Sea (2018)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Sea of Greed (2019)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Journey of the Pharaohs (2020)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Fast Ice (2021)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Dark Vector (2022)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Condor’s Fury (2023)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Desolation Code (2024)
(With Graham Brown)
View Book - Cold Fire (2026)
(By Graham Brown)
View Book
About NUMA Files
Clive Cussler’s NUMA Files series is best understood as a sister line to the Dirk Pitt novels rather than a replacement for them. It grows out of the same National Underwater and Marine Agency setting, but shifts the center of gravity to Kurt Austin and Joe Zavala, whose adventures give the books a slightly different rhythm from the main Pitt line. Official series pages present Kurt and Joe as the core of the series, with the novels built around NUMA missions, underwater discoveries, advanced technology, and large-scale threats that often begin at sea and widen into global danger.
That distinction matters because NUMA Files is not just “more Dirk Pitt” under another label. Dirk Pitt remains the flagship Cussler hero, but Kurt Austin is written for a somewhat different branch of the adventure formula. The books still deliver the same broad pleasures associated with Cussler—lost history, engineering marvels, hidden enemies, environmental peril, and spectacular action—but Kurt’s series tends to feel more team-driven. Joe Zavala and the wider NUMA cast are central to the identity of the books, which gives the line more of a collaborative mission structure than the more singular heroics associated with Pitt.
Publication order matters here because the series is long enough to show clear internal phases. The early novels established Kurt Austin as a recurring lead in his own right, and the series then continued through multiple co-author eras. The first stretch is associated with Paul Kemprecos, while later books were written with Graham Brown, and official publisher pages now list the most recent entries under the continuing series created by Clive Cussler. Read in order, the books show how NUMA Files evolved from a spin-off into one of the main pillars of the wider Cussler bibliography.
That evolution is one reason the series has its own identity rather than feeling like a side shelf beside Dirk Pitt. The books preserve Cussler’s taste for bold plotting and marine adventure, but they also lean heavily into techno-thriller elements, special assignments, and team-based problem solving. The result is a series that sits comfortably inside the Cussler universe while still rewarding readers who want a different lead dynamic and a somewhat more ensemble-driven structure.
Another useful way to think about NUMA Files is as the point where Cussler’s underwater adventure interests and his franchise-building instincts meet most clearly. The NUMA premise gives the books a natural pipeline into submerged wrecks, ocean anomalies, marine science, and hidden operations, while the recurring team allows the series to sustain momentum across many books without depending on exactly the same heroic pattern every time. That makes the line feel expansive without becoming shapeless. It belongs to the same world as Dirk Pitt, but it develops its own tone through Kurt Austin’s leadership and the recurring NUMA crew.
The series also matters in Cussler’s career because it became one of his major long-running brands. Penguin Random House’s series page currently lists twenty books in the line, and retail and catalog sources show the sequence extending from Serpent through later entries such as Dark Vector and Condor’s Fury, with the publisher page already promoting a twentieth book in the ongoing series. That scale confirms that NUMA Files is not a minor experiment or a brief offshoot. It became one of the main engines of the Cussler publishing universe.
Taken as a whole, the NUMA Files books are best understood as Clive Cussler’s team-based underwater adventure series: a long-running companion line to Dirk Pitt, anchored by Kurt Austin and Joe Zavala, and built around oceanic mystery, high technology, and escalating global peril. Read in publication order, the series shows how a spin-off can grow into a major franchise of its own while still remaining unmistakably part of the larger Cussler world.