Allie Krycek Books in Order
Part ofSam Sisavath Books in OrderSee the Allie Krycek books in order by Sam Sisavath, with short summaries, series background, and guidance for starting this dark vigilante thriller series.
Last updated: June 9, 2026
As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases (at no extra cost to you).
Publication Order
4 books
Hunter/Prey
by Sam Sisavath
2015
Allie Krycek has spent ten years preparing to kill the serial murderer who ruined her life. When she finally makes her move, the man who has hunted women for years learns what it feels like to be hunted back.
Saint/Sinner
by Sam Sisavath
2015
Allie wants a normal life after her first blood-soaked reckoning, but the world has other ideas. When ruthless criminals close in, she has to decide how much of herself she can still hold back.
Finders/Keepers
by Sam Sisavath
2016
Allie ends up trapped alongside killers and forced to face a larger criminal network. Survival means staying sharp, hitting first, and never assuming the worst person in the room is the only threat.
Savior/Corruptor
by Sam Sisavath
2019
Allie Krycek returns for another ruthless showdown where justice and vengeance blur together. The deeper she goes, the harder it becomes to tell who needs saving and who deserves fear.
Series background & context
The Allie Krycek books are tight, nasty vigilante thrillers built around one very simple fact: Allie does not forget. The first book begins with a revenge plan years in the making, and that tells you almost everything you need to know about her. She is patient, angry, capable, and a lot more dangerous than the people around her first assume.
It starts personal.
In Hunter/Prey, Allie goes after the serial killer who destroyed her family. That first story is built like a chase in both directions, with hunter and hunted constantly shifting places. After that, the series refuses to let her settle back into normal life. One act of vengeance does not clean up the world. It just changes how Allie moves through it.
As the books continue, she keeps running into the same hard truth: once you learn how violence works, the world has a way of asking you to use that knowledge again. Criminal crews, predators, and larger conspiracies pull her deeper into situations where the clean line between justice and obsession stops feeling clean at all. She wants control. The stories keep taking it away.
What makes the series work is that Allie is not written as a superhero. She is tough, but she can be cornered. She is prepared, but plans go bad. The danger feels immediate, and Sisavath likes putting her in stories where intelligence matters as much as nerve. The books are short, sharp, and usually only a few bad decisions away from total disaster.
If you want Sisavath at his leanest, this is a good place to go. The Babylon books sprawl. Allie's stories cut. They are revenge thrillers with real momentum, a strong central character, and just enough moral mess to keep the victories from feeling easy.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.


















Comments
Did we miss something? Have feedback?
Help us improve this page by sharing your thoughts