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John Sandford Books in Order: Complete Prey Series Reading Guide (2026)

Every John Sandford book in order — the complete Prey/Lucas Davenport series, the Virgil Flowers series, and how they connect — with where to start.

By Tom Gillespie

John Sandford has been publishing crime fiction since 1989 and shows no signs of stopping — over thirty Prey novels, twelve-plus Virgil Flowers novels, and a career that has put him consistently on the New York Times bestseller list for more than three decades. The Prey series follows Lucas Davenport, a Minneapolis detective and later BCA agent, across a career and a life that genuinely evolves.

The reading order is clear: start with Rules of Prey and read forward. The series rewards long-term commitment because Davenport ages, changes, and accumulates history across thirty-plus books. But each novel is also self-contained enough for readers who want to start at a different point.

Quick answer: Start with Rules of Prey for the origin. Jump to Field of Prey (Book 24) or Ocean Prey (Book 31) for the series at its recent best.


The Prey Series — All Books in Order

#TitleYearNotes
1Rules of Prey1989Start here
2Shadow Prey1990
3Eyes of Prey1991
4Silent Prey1992
5Winter Prey1993
6Night Prey1994
7Mind Prey1995
8Sudden Prey1996Fan favourite
9Secret Prey1998
10Certain Prey1999
11Easy Prey2000
12Chosen Prey2001
13Mortal Prey2002
14Naked Prey2003Frequently cited; setting change
15Hidden Prey2004
16Broken Prey2005
17Invisible Prey2007
18Phantom Prey2008
19Wicked Prey2009
20Storm Prey2010
21Buried Prey2011
22Stolen Prey2012
23Silken Prey2013
24Field of Prey2014Rural Minnesota; strong entry
25Gathering Prey2015
26Extreme Prey2016
27Golden Prey2017
28Twisted Prey2018
29Neon Prey2019
30Masked Prey2020
31Ocean Prey2021Davenport/Flowers crossover
32Righteous Prey2022Davenport/Flowers crossover
33+Continuing2023+

The Virgil Flowers Series — All Books in Order

#TitleYear
1Dark of the Moon2007
2Heat Lightning2008
3Rough Country2009
4Bad Blood2010
5shock wave2011
6Mad River2012
7Storm Front2013
8Deadline2014
9Escape Clause2016
10Deep Freeze2017
11Holy Ghost2018
12Bloody Genius2019
13Ocean Prey (crossover)2021
14Righteous Prey (crossover)2022
15+Continuing2023+

Who Is Lucas Davenport?

Lucas Davenport is one of crime fiction’s most distinctive protagonists — a Minneapolis police detective (later BCA agent) who is also a wealthy man, having made millions from game software he developed in the 1980s. He wears expensive suits. He has a complicated personal life. He is brilliant, occasionally ruthless, and not always easy to like.

His wealth and personal life give the series a texture that most police procedurals lack — Davenport has interests outside his cases, and those interests are as carefully developed as the procedural elements. The result is a character who feels like a full person across thirty-plus books rather than a formula that generates plots.


Who Is Virgil Flowers?

Virgil Flowers is a BCA agent who reports nominally to Davenport and operates his own series. Where Davenport is intense and focused, Flowers is laid-back, self-deprecating, and operates primarily in rural Minnesota. The contrast between the two characters is one of Sandford’s most effective constructs — they are genuinely different people, and reading both series gives you the full range of what Sandford does.


The Best John Sandford Books

Rules of Prey — The origin; the only starting point.

Sudden Prey (Book 6) — Considered by many fans the best early series entry. A criminal’s associates come after Davenport.

Naked Prey (Book 14) — Frequently cited as the strongest mid-series entry; a deliberately paced case in rural Minnesota.

Field of Prey (Book 24) — The most praised recent full-series entry; rural community concealing a long-running killer.

Ocean Prey (Book 31) — The Davenport/Flowers crossover that most readers consider the most entertaining recent entry.


Frequently Asked Questions

Should I read the Prey series or Virgil Flowers series first?

Start with the Prey series (Rules of Prey). Virgil Flowers is introduced as a character in Davenport’s world — knowing Davenport first makes the Flowers introduction richer. Once you’re a few books into the Prey series, you can start the Flowers series in parallel.

Can I read just a few Prey books instead of all 30+?

Yes — Rules of Prey (origin), Sudden Prey (early peak), Naked Prey (mid-series), and Ocean Prey (recent best) give you the four most celebrated entries across the series arc. That’s a manageable four-book survey.


For more crime series guides, see our Harry Bosch Books in Order and Michael Connelly Books in Order guides. For action-thriller readers, see our Brad Thor Books in Order guide.


Affiliate disclosure: Links on this site are affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. This does not influence our editorial recommendations.

Frequently Asked Questions

What order should I read John Sandford's Prey books?

Read the Prey series in publication order, starting with Rules of Prey (1989). Lucas Davenport ages and changes across the series — relationships develop, his career evolves, and the emotional continuity of reading in order adds significantly to the experience. Each book is also self-contained enough that you can start with a more recent entry.

Is the Virgil Flowers series connected to the Prey series?

Yes — Virgil Flowers is an investigator who reports to Lucas Davenport at the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension. The two characters appear in each other's series and cross over fully in Ocean Prey (2021) and Righteous Prey (2022). You can read either series independently; both are enhanced by knowledge of the other.

How many John Sandford Prey books are there?

As of 2026, there are over 32 Lucas Davenport / Prey novels. Sandford publishes approximately one book per year, alternating between the Prey and Virgil Flowers series. The series shows no signs of concluding.

What is John Sandford's best book?

Among series fans, Rules of Prey (the original), Sudden Prey (Book 6), Chosen Prey (Book 12), and Naked Prey (Book 14) are most frequently cited as standouts. Field of Prey and Ocean Prey are the most praised recent entries. The series is consistently good rather than having clear peaks and valleys.

Is John Sandford the same as John Camp?

Yes — John Sandford is the pen name of John Camp, a journalist who won the Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for a series on farm foreclosures in Minnesota. He began writing fiction as John Camp before adopting the Sandford pen name with Rules of Prey in 1989.

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