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Where to Start with Brad Thor: A Reading Guide

Where to start with Brad Thor — whether to begin with The Lions of Lucerne, Near Dark, or Black Ice. A complete reading guide to the Scot Harvath thrillers.

By Tom Gillespie

Brad Thor (born 1969) is the American thriller novelist whose Scot Harvath series — beginning with The Lions of Lucerne (2002) — has produced more than twenty novels, with multiple entries reaching number one on the New York Times bestseller list. Thor writes in the tradition of Vince Flynn and Tom Clancy: former military protagonists, contemporary geopolitical threats, detailed tactical and intelligence tradecraft, and a deliberately conservative political perspective that has found a large and loyal readership among fans of the genre. His later novels (roughly from Use of Force in 2017 onward) are generally considered his strongest, combining the action plotting of the early books with more psychological depth.


Where to Start: The Lions of Lucerne (2002)

The beginning of the Scot Harvath series — and the novel that established Thor’s voice and his protagonist. Scot Harvath is on a ski trip with the President of the United States when a spectacular attack kills the entire Secret Service detail and kidnaps the President. Harvath survives. He investigates.

The novel moves at pace through ski country Utah and then Switzerland, building the conspiracy Harvath must unravel. The plotting is efficient; the action sequences are credibly drawn from Thor’s research with military and intelligence sources; and Harvath is introduced as a fully formed protagonist whose tactical competence is matched by personal intensity.

Starting at the beginning is the right approach for readers who want to follow Harvath’s full arc. The early novels are competent genre thrillers; the series becomes more accomplished as Thor’s craft develops.


Near Dark (2020)

Thor at his recent best — Harvath personally devastated and professionally hunted. Won the International Thriller Writers Award for Best Novel; the most emotionally resonant entry in the series and an accessible standalone starting point.


Black Ice (2021)

Harvath in Central Asia facing a complex geopolitical threat. One of the strongest recent entries; for readers who want to continue after Near Dark.


Reading Brad Thor

Begin with The Lions of Lucerne for the full Harvath arc from the start, or start with Near Dark for Thor’s most acclaimed recent work. The series has enough internal continuity to reward reading in order but enough standalone plotting to be accessible from any recent entry.


Brad Thor Books in Order →

For the full Brad Thor bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Brad Thor author page on Editors Reads.


Affiliate disclosure: Links to Amazon on this page are affiliate links. We earn a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Frequently Asked Questions

Where should I start with Brad Thor?

The Lions of Lucerne (2002) is the chronological starting point — the debut Scot Harvath novel, introducing the former Navy SEAL and Secret Service agent who will become Thor's recurring protagonist across more than twenty novels. Harvath investigates a conspiracy after the US President is kidnapped during a ski trip in Utah. Starting from the beginning gives the fullest character development, but Thor's later novels (from 2015 onward) are generally considered his strongest work.

Who is Scot Harvath?

Scot Harvath is Brad Thor's series protagonist — a former Navy SEAL who serves with the Secret Service and later becomes a covert operative for a private intelligence firm. He is physically formidable, tactically expert, politically conservative, and personally complex; his character develops across the series from a relatively straightforward action hero toward a more morally complicated figure. The series is set in the contemporary real-world geopolitical landscape and frequently involves actual events and locations.

Do I need to read Brad Thor's books in order?

The Scot Harvath series has a running continuity — character relationships deepen across books and major events in earlier novels are referenced in later ones — but most books work well as standalone thrillers. Readers who start from the beginning get the fullest character development; readers who start with a recent book (such as Near Dark or Black Ice) will find them accessible entry points with minimal required background. Thor himself has said his books can be read in any order.

What is Near Dark about?

Near Dark (2020) is one of Thor's most acclaimed recent novels — Harvath recovering from devastating personal losses while being hunted by a mysterious assassin. The combination of personal vulnerability and high-stakes action is more emotionally grounded than much of the earlier series; it won the International Thriller Writers Award for Best Novel. A strong entry point for readers who want Brad Thor at his best rather than at his beginning.

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