Below is the complete list of Clive Cussler’s Oregon Files books in order of publication. This is the recommended reading sequence for the series.
Oregon Files Books in Publication Order
- Golden Buddha (2003)
(With Craig Dirgo)
View Book - Sacred Stone (2004)
(With Craig Dirgo)
View Book - Dark Watch (2005)
(With Jack Du Brul)
View Book - Skeleton Coast (2006)
(With Jack Du Brul)
View Book - Plague Ship (2008)
(With Jack Du Brul)
View Book - Corsair (2009)
(With Jack Du Brul)
View Book - The Silent Sea (2010)
(With Jack Du Brul)
View Book - The Jungle (2011)
(With Jack Du Brul)
View Book - Mirage (2013)
(With Jack Du Brul)
View Book - Piranha (2015)
(With Boyd Morrison)
View Book - The Emperor’s Revenge (2017)
(With Boyd Morrison)
View Book - Typhoon Fury (2017)
(With Boyd Morrison)
View Book - Shadow Tyrants (2018)
(With Boyd Morrison)
View Book - Final Option (2019)
(With Boyd Morrison)
View Book - Marauder (2020)
(With Boyd Morrison)
View Book - Hellburner (2022)
(By Mike Maden)
View Book - Fire Strike (2023)
(By Mike Maden)
View Book - Ghost Soldier (2024)
(By Mike Maden)
View Book - Quantum Tempest (2025)
(By Mike Maden)
View Book
About Oregon Files
Clive Cussler’s Oregon Files series is one of the major later branches of his adventure fiction, but it is not simply a duplicate of the Dirk Pitt books under another name. The official series framing places Juan Cabrillo and the crew of the Oregon at the center, with the ship itself serving as one of the line’s defining inventions: a heavily armed, technologically sophisticated vessel disguised as a rusting tramp steamer. That premise gives the series its special flavor. These books are built less around a lone larger-than-life hero than around a covert team operating through deception, mobility, and specialized expertise.
That team structure is what makes Oregon Files feel different from the flagship Cussler line. Dirk Pitt may be the signature Cussler adventurer, but Juan Cabrillo is written as the chairman of a covert organization, and the novels depend on the abilities of the wider crew as much as on his own nerve and leadership. The result is a more mission-driven series, one in which strategy, disguise, infiltration, and coordinated action matter as much as the traditional Cussler pleasures of lost history, dangerous technology, and globe-spanning peril.
Publication order matters here because the series has grown through several distinct phases. The official Penguin Random House series page shows the line extending at least to Fire Strike as book 17 and Ghost Soldier as book 18, while the more recent continuation also includes Clive Cussler’s Hellburner. That long run makes sequence important not just for continuity, but for tone and authorship. Over time, Oregon Files evolved from a spin-off concept into one of the main pillars of the Cussler brand, and reading in order lets that expansion feel natural rather than fragmented.
The co-author history is also part of how the series should be understood. Publisher and official overview material associate the line with multiple collaborators across its run, including Boyd Morrison and later Mike Maden, while still presenting it as part of the broader Clive Cussler publishing universe. That matters because Oregon Files is one of the clearest examples of how Cussler’s fiction became a true franchise model: one created by him, then extended through carefully branded continuation novels that preserve the same adventure architecture.
Tonally, the series sits comfortably in modern action-adventure, but with a stronger techno-thriller and black-ops edge than some of the other Cussler lines. The Oregon crew repeatedly faces threats involving advanced weapons, sabotage, terrorism, and international conspiracies, and the disguised-ship premise allows the books to combine maritime adventure with covert-operations suspense in a way that feels distinctively their own. The ship is not just a setting. It is part of the series identity, a mobile illusion that lets the novels play with misdirection as much as spectacle.
Seen as a whole, Oregon Files is best understood as Clive Cussler’s covert-team adventure series: a long-running branch of the larger Cussler world built around Juan Cabrillo, a hidden warship disguised as junk, and a crew whose missions turn marine danger into global high-stakes conflict. Read in publication order, the books show how a spin-off premise became one of the most durable and recognizable components of the entire Cussler universe.