David Weber (John Ringo) Books in Order
Part ofJohn Ringo Books in OrderExplore every collaboration between David Weber and John Ringo in order, with book lists, summaries, and background on how their joint military SF projects grew out of their solo work.
Last updated: December 25, 2025
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Publication Order
4 books
We Few
by David Weber
2004
Off](https://www.amazon.com/dp/1416520848%22,%22description%22:%22Off) Marduk at last, Prince Roger and the survivors of the Bronze Battalion discover that home has turned hostile. Branded traitors, they must use hard-won allies and stolen ships to challenge a usurper and save a wounded empire from the shadows.
March to the Stars
by David Weber
2002
At](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0743488180%22,%22description%22:%22At) last nearing their objective, Roger and his dwindling Marines must cross an ocean, confront new cultures, and seize a foothold near the guarded spaceport. The march becomes a campaign, and every decision Roger makes now shapes the fate of the Empire of Man.
March Upcountry
by David Weber
2001
Prince](https://www.amazon.com/dp/0743435389%22,%22description%22:%22Prince) Roger MacClintock, a pampered imperial heir, is stranded with his Marine bodyguards on the deadly jungle world of Marduk. To reach the only spaceport, they must march across a hostile planet, forging uneasy alliances and fighting for every mile.
March to the Sea
by David Weber
2001
Having](https://www.amazon.com/dp/074343580X%22,%22description%22:%22Having) survived their first trek on Marduk, Prince Roger and the battered Bronze Battalion push toward the far side of the world. New enemies, fragile local allies, and brutal terrain test whether the prince has truly become a leader or will get them all killed.
Series background & context
The David Weber (John Ringo) grouping pulls together the books where the two authors share a byline. Most prominent are the Prince Roger novels, also marketed as Empire of Man or the March Upcountry series, which blend Weber’s love of sprawling empires with Ringo’s taste for squad-level chaos.
Their collaboration starts with a simple disaster: a royal transport sabotaged, a prince and his guards stranded, and a planet full of hostile life between them and the only functioning spaceport. From there the books spiral outward into politics, succession crises, and the question of what kind of ruler a once-useless younger son might become.
Weber brings an eye for constitutional detail and the long view of history. Ringo leans into the mud, blood, and banter of infantry trying to stay alive one ridge at a time. Together they create science fiction that feels both big-picture and immediate.
On this page you will find those joint projects grouped in order, with short notes on how they tie into the larger Weber and Ringo universes. If you enjoy the energy of Ringo’s solo series but want more fleet actions, or you like Weber’s naval epics and want something grittier underfoot, this is where the two approaches meet in the middle.
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