Albert Campion (Mike Ripley) Books in Order
Part ofMike Ripley Books in OrderSee the Albert Campion continuation novels by Mike Ripley in order, with summaries, background and suggestions on the best Campion adventure to read first.
Last updated: January 17, 2026
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Publication Order
31 books
Mr. Campion's Wings
by Mike Ripley
2022
When Lady Amanda Campion is arrested under the Official Secrets Act during a Cambridge ceremony, Albert is forced to take an interest in her hush‑hush Goshawk aircraft project. A horrific "accident" in the hangar points to espionage and lethal ambition.
Mr. Campion's Mosaic
by Mike Ripley
2022
In 1972 Albert Campion is roped into an Evadne Childe society meeting and asked to investigate a troubled TV adaptation of one of her novels. On a Dorset location shoot he encounters ghost‑hunters, an ancient mosaic and a saboteur prepared to kill.
Mr Campion's Coven
by Mike Ripley
2021
A Soho club owner is shot in circumstances uncannily predicted by a best‑selling detective novel written months before. As further crimes echo fiction over the next two decades, Albert Campion and his police friends hunt a killer who seems to be reading ahead.
Mr Campion's Seance
by Mike Ripley
2020
A Soho club owner is shot in circumstances uncannily predicted by a best‑selling detective novel written months before. As further crimes echo fiction over the next two decades, Albert Campion and his police friends hunt a killer who seems to be reading ahead.
Mr Campion's Visit
by Mike Ripley
2019
In 1970 Albert Campion returns to Black Dudley, now part of a new university, as its official Visitor. When a charismatic professor researching mineral deposits is stabbed on campus, Campion must untangle academic politics and old scandals to find the killer.
Mr Campion's War
by Mike Ripley
2018
On his seventieth birthday, Albert Campion finally tells the story of a clandestine mission that sent him into occupied France during the war. His recollection of gangsters, double agents and betrayal shows how one dangerous job shaped the rest of his life.
Mr. Campion's Abdication
by Mike Ripley
2017
Playing adviser to a glamorous Italian film crew in Suffolk, Albert Campion revisits an old archaeological dig once visited by Edward VIII and Wallis Simpson. Rumours of an "Abdication treasure" still haunt the village, and someone will kill to control the legend.
Mr. Campion's Fault
by Mike Ripley
2016
When Rupert Campion is arrested while coaching rugby at a Yorkshire boys’ school, Albert heads north to clear his son’s name. In a close‑knit mining village he untangles a master’s suspicious death, ghost stories and grudges that never really faded.
Mr. Campion's Fox
by Mike Ripley
2015
Asked to discreetly watch over a Danish ambassador’s headstrong daughter and her dubious boyfriend, Albert Campion enlists his actor son Rupert. When the couple vanish and a body surfaces in a lagoon, a simple family favour becomes a murder inquiry.
Mr. Campion's Farewell
by Mike Ripley
2014
Albert Campion is drawn to the tightly controlled village of Lindsay Carfax, where a series of bizarre "nine days" incidents hides something far more calculated. As he probes the town’s secretive rulers, quaint traditions turn lethally dangerous.
Mr. Campion's Quarry
by Margery Allingham
1970
When an archaeologist dies suddenly and his maverick geologist colleague disappears, Campion suspects their remote quarry in the countryside hides more than fossils. Murder, kidnapping and a potential fortune buried in the rock draw in greedy opportunists, leaving Campion racing to keep his friends out of the crossfire.
Mr. Campion's Farthing
by Margery Allingham
1969
At the fusty Inglewood Turrets hotel in north London, a minor Russian diplomat vanishes, leaving only his code name, Farthing, and a whiff of Cold War intrigue. Campion and his adult son Rupert pick through eccentric guests, spies and defectors to find out who is trading secrets and why Farthing had to disappear.
Cargo of Eagles
by Margery Allingham
1968
The Essex village of Saltey, long a haunt of smugglers, is seething with bikers, poison pen letters and rumours of a demon in the marshes. Campion sends young American researcher Mortimer Kelsey to stay there, hoping he can unearth the truth about a long ago robbery and the treasure it left behind.
The Mind Readers
by Margery Allingham
1965
Campion and his wife Amanda take their schoolboy nephew and his clever cousin to visit a remote research island on the east coast. When one boy vanishes and shadowy figures covet a new electronic device, Campion and Detective Luke confront spies, kidnappers and unsettling hints of mind reading technology.
The China Governess
by Margery Allingham
1962
On the eve of an elopement, wealthy Timothy Kinnit learns he was adopted as a wartime baby and that ugly rumours cling to his unknown origins. With his future in doubt, Campion digs into the history of the bomb blasted Turk Street Mile and an old scandal involving a ruthless governess.
Hide My Eyes
by Margery Allingham
1958
An old fashioned bus, a quiet London street and a single left hand glove are the few clues to a string of murders. Following a trail from a sinister private museum to an East End scrapyard, Campion hunts a patient killer whose respectability hides obsessive violence.
The Beckoning Lady
by Margery Allingham
1955
Back in the Suffolk village of Pontisbright, Campion hopes for a lazy summer while his friends Minnie and Tonker Cassand prepare an extravagant garden party. When a body turns up on their land and the tax authorities close in, he must untangle overlapping motives in this oddly carefree community.
The Tiger in the Smoke
by Margery Allingham
1952
In postwar London smothered by fog, rumours whisper that "the Tiger" is loose again. When war widow Meg Elginbrodde receives photographs suggesting her dead husband is alive, Campion’s enquiries collide with escaped killer Jack Havoc, whose hunt for a hidden treasure turns the city into his hunting ground.
More Work for the Undertaker
by Margery Allingham
1948
In shabby Apron Street, disappearing criminals are quietly tidied away by the local undertakers, while the eccentric Palinode family lives above a chemist’s shop. Sent in by Lugg, Campion investigates two strange deaths among the Palinodes and a banker prepared to kill to get them out of the way.
Pearls Before Swine
by Margery Allingham
1945
Coming home to London after years on secret war work, a weary Campion finds a dead woman dumped in his own flat. Reluctantly drawn in, he uncovers a trail linking her murder to missing art treasures and rare wine, chasing a nimble killer through blackout haunted streets.
Traitor's Purse
by Margery Allingham
1940
Recovering from a head injury in a country hospital, Campion cannot remember his own name, only that he must stop something terrible. Branded a cop killer and on the run through a secretive wartime town, he pieces together a plot involving counterfeit money, treason and his fractured engagement to Amanda.
The Fashion in Shrouds
by Margery Allingham
1938
When a long missing man’s skeleton is found, Campion’s investigation leads to glamorous actress Georgia Wells and to his sister Val, a fashion designer supplying Georgia’s stage wardrobe. As lovers, rivals and old scandals swirl around a golden aeroplane, a string of convenient deaths begins to look planned.
The Case of the Late Pig
by Margery Allingham
1937
Campion narrates this case himself, beginning with the obituary of R. I. "Pig" Peters, a brutal school bully he buried months before. When Pig’s body turns up freshly murdered in a village, Campion faces a bizarre tangle of funerals, missing corpses and lingering grudges.
Dancers in Mourning
by Margery Allingham
1937
Popular song and dance star Jimmy Sutane is plagued by cruel practical jokes as his new show opens. Called in by a mutual friend, Campion enters a theatrical household where old scandals, jealous understudies and a fatal "accident" blur together, and his growing feelings for Sutane’s wife cloud his judgment.
Flowers for the Judge
by Margery Allingham
1936
The venerable Barnabas publishing firm is rocked when director Paul Brande vanishes and then turns up dead, locked in the company strongroom. With another relative once having disappeared in broad daylight, Campion wades into family tensions and financial pressure to uncover what the Barnabas cousins are hiding.
Death of a Ghost
by Margery Allingham
1934
Eighteen years after flamboyant painter John Lafcadio’s death, his widow still unveils a newly discovered canvas each year. During one unveiling the lights fail and a man is stabbed in the dark. Campion, present as a guest, must probe jealousies and secrets in the bohemian art circle.
Sweet Danger
by Margery Allingham
1933
A tiny Adriatic principality, Averna, suddenly becomes strategically vital, and rival claimants scramble for the rights. Campion travels to the village of Pontisbright to help the impoverished Fitton family prove their title, racing a ruthless financier and meeting ingenious teenager Amanda Fitton along the way.
Police at the Funeral
by Margery Allingham
1931
When a disagreeable uncle disappears from a repressive Cambridge household, Campion is asked to help the anxious niece. Soon bodies mount within the eccentric Faraday clan, and Campion must work with Scotland Yard to navigate poisonous family loyalties before anyone else dies.
Look to the Lady
by Margery Allingham
1931
Campion plucks young Val Gyrth off the London streets and escorts him home to protect an ancient family treasure, the Gyrth Chalice. In the Suffolk countryside, attempted theft, murder and local superstition collide, forcing Campion to outwit a ruthless gang after the heirloom.
Mystery Mile
by Margery Allingham
1930
American judge Crowdy Lobbett is marked for death by the shadowy Simister gang, even after he flees to England. Albert Campion spirits the family to isolated Mystery Mile on the Suffolk coast, where vanishing relatives, a sinister maze and village secrets lead to a final confrontation.
The Crime at Black Dudley
by Margery Allingham
1929
At a country house weekend in the grim old mansion of Black Dudley, a harmless ritual with an ancient dagger turns deadly when the host is killed and gangsters seize control. Among the trapped guests, the seemingly foolish Albert Campion proves surprisingly resourceful.
Series background & context
This series follows the later life of Albert Campion as imagined by Mike Ripley, picking up the threads left by Margery Allingham and Philip Youngman Carter. It begins with Mr. Campion’s Farewell, which completes an unfinished manuscript, then moves into entirely new adventures.
Ripley keeps Campion anchored in the same world of bishops, clubland rogues and family secrets, but lets time move on. The books step through key moments in twentieth century Britain, from the Abdication era and the uneasy late 1930s to wartime missions in occupied Europe and the shifting social landscape of the 1960s and early 70s.
Readers see Campion working alongside old allies such as his wife Amanda, his ex burglar factotum Lugg and policemen like Oates, Yeo and Luke, while his son Rupert and younger generations take a greater role. The detective is older, a little more reflective, but still prepared to walk into danger if that is the only way to keep the peace.
The cases themselves are varied. One novel explores rumours of a lost "Abdication treasure" tied to a Suffolk archaeological dig once visited by Edward VIII. Others deal with a Danish diplomatic scandal, an apparently cursed Yorkshire school, wartime intelligence work, bottle clubs in postwar Soho or witchcraft legends on the Essex coast. Later books take Campion into Cambridge laboratories and onto television sets, where modern media and old secrets collide.
In tone, Ripley aims for lightness without losing weight. The stories mix witty dialogue and gently mocking observation with serious crimes, political undercurrents and an awareness that Campion and his world are ageing. Rather than freezing the character in his 1930s prime, these novels treat him as a man who has lived through war, social change and personal loss, and is still paying attention.
For readers who already know Allingham’s books, this sequence feels like a respectful continuation that fills in gaps and spins out hinted‑at episodes. Newcomers can also start here, meeting Campion as an experienced, watchful figure moving through a vividly drawn mid‑century England where the Golden Age of detection has not quite ended.
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