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Alaska Thrillers Books in Order

Part ofAndrew Cunningham Books in Order

See the Alaska Thrillers by Andrew Cunningham in order, with short summaries, series background, and a handy guide to where to start.

Last updated: June 10, 2026

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Publication Order

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4 books

1

Wisdom Spring

by Andrew Cunningham

2013

Jessica Norton is accused of murdering four members of a senator's staff, and grieving Jon Harper unexpectedly becomes her ally. Their flight from a powerful conspiracy leads toward Alaska and a truth bigger than either expected.

2

Nowhere Alone

by Andrew Cunningham

2023

Bush pilot Scott Harper is forced at gunpoint to land in the middle of nowhere, then crashes while escaping. Injured and hunted in the Alaskan wilderness, he has to keep moving or die where no one will find him.

3

The 7th Passenger

by Andrew Cunningham

2024

Scott Harper, his adopted daughter Michaela, and dog Max find the wreckage of a plane that vanished in 1966. The bodies inside raise one impossible question, who was the seventh passenger, and why does the CIA care?

4

Lost Passage

by Andrew Cunningham

2025

A half-frozen stranger brings Scott Harper a story about a hidden valley near an abandoned Alaska mining town. To stay alive, Scott has to return to a place loaded with bad memories and deadly secrets.

Series background & context

The Alaska Thrillers are where Andrew Cunningham leans hardest into wide-open country, physical danger, and the feeling that the landscape itself can finish the job if the bad guys do not get there first. The series begins with Wisdom Spring, which starts as a conspiracy chase and gradually pulls north. From there, the books settle more firmly into Alaska, where bush planes, remote towns, abandoned sites, and hard weather become part of the pressure on every plot.

The Harper family sits near the center of the series. Jon Harper drives the first book, a grieving father swept into a government conspiracy after he meets a woman on the run. Later books shift more attention to Scott Harper, a bush pilot whose work takes him deep into the wilderness. That change works well because Scott belongs to the setting in a different way. He understands the terrain, the planes, and the danger, but even that knowledge only goes so far when people are chasing him through country that can kill on its own.

Alaska is not background scenery here.

It shapes the suspense. In Nowhere Alone, a forced landing and a crash turn the wild into a maze and a survival test. In The 7th Passenger, the discovery of a long-lost wreck pulls Scott into an old mystery with very modern consequences. In Lost Passage, the promise of a hidden valley sends characters back toward a place already loaded with fear and unfinished business. The series keeps finding ways to turn distance, weather, and isolation into plot.

That gives these books a slightly different feel from Cunningham's other work. The mysteries are still there, and so are the twists, but there is more emphasis on movement, pursuit, and getting through the next stretch alive. Planes matter. Snow matters. Rivers, mountains, and abandoned mining towns matter. The action tends to be direct, and the best moments come when practical skill collides with a secret nobody should have touched in the first place.

There is also a family thread running through the series that keeps it grounded. Scott's life does not stop being personal just because the plot turns dangerous. Later books pull in people close to him, including his adopted daughter Michaela and his dog Max, which adds warmth without softening the tension. Cunningham is good at that balance. He lets the reader enjoy the setting and the adventure, but he keeps the stakes tied to people rather than spectacle.

If you like thrillers that mix wilderness survival, buried history, and quick-moving mystery, this series is a strong fit. The Alaska books are less about polished espionage and more about ordinary people being dragged into extraordinary situations in a place where help may be far away. That combination gives the series its identity. The secrets are dangerous, but Alaska is what makes them feel inescapable.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

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All 4 Alaska Thrillers Books in Order (Complete List 2026)