Baudin & Dixon Trilogy Books in Order
Part ofVictor Methos Books in OrderFind the Baudin & Dixon Trilogy books in order by Victor Methos, with summaries, trilogy background, and where to start this Wyoming detective series.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
The Unseen
by Victor Methos
2015
The murders of two prostitutes push Baudin and Dixon into a case filled with predators who rely on staying invisible. What begins as brutal street crime starts opening onto something larger.
Vanished
by Victor Methos
2015
A rare major case shakes Cheyenne and puts Ethan Baudin and Kyle Dixon on the trail of a disappearance that points toward murder. The farther they dig, the less anyone wants the truth uncovered.
The Veiled
by Victor Methos
2017
Ethan Baudin is pulled back toward police work when old violence and buried truths refuse to stay buried. The past is not done with him, or with the people who covered it up.
Series background & context
The Baudin & Dixon books are lean detective thrillers set in Wyoming, and the setting does a lot of the work. These stories are built around Ethan Baudin and Kyle Dixon, investigators working cases that begin with a local crime and keep widening into something uglier.
Cheyenne and the surrounding country give the trilogy a different rhythm from Methos's city books. There is more open space, more quiet, and a stronger sense that people can disappear into distance, weather, or small-town silence. That doesn't make the crimes feel smaller. It makes them feel harder to pin down. A place can look empty and still hold plenty of secrets.
The partnership at the center helps too. Baudin and Dixon are not written as quirky opposites forced together for banter. They feel more like working detectives carrying the strain of bad cases and difficult truths. As the trilogy goes on, the books keep asking what the truth is worth once uncovering it starts harming careers, relationships, or whatever sense of safety the town still has left.
The cases move through disappearances, murdered women, prostitution, buried evidence, and the kind of institutional cover-ups that grow because too many people decide it is easier to look away. That makes the trilogy less about one flashy villain and more about how harm can settle into a place over time. When the investigators start digging, they are often pulling at threads other people would rather leave alone.
Methos keeps the pace quick, but there is a steady procedural feel here. These books are interested in interviews, follow-up work, old files, and the slow pressure of narrowing possibilities. The violence can be harsh, but the series is less interested in spectacle than in consequences. Every answer seems to come with some cost attached.
If you like small-city detective fiction with a bleak undercurrent and a strong sense of place, Baudin & Dixon should work well. The books connect closely enough that reading them in order makes the most sense, especially because the personal fallout and the larger web of secrets build from one novel to the next.
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