Galaxy's Edge: Order Of The Centurion Books in Order
Part ofJason Anspach Books in OrderSee the Galaxy's Edge: Order Of The Centurion books by Jason Anspach in order, with summaries, series background, and reading guidance.
Last updated: June 11, 2026
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Publication Order
8 books
Order of the Centurion
by Jason Anspach
2018
Lieutenant Washam is tired of watching the war on Psydon from a mobile office. A covert mission behind enemy lines gives him a chance to matter, and maybe die trying.
Iron Wolves
by Jason Anspach
2019
The Iron Wolves, a storied Legion company, expect a rare moment of honor on a backwater world. Instead, old soldiers find themselves tested when peace breaks apart.
Stryker's War
by Jason Anspach
2019
Stryker Company relieves embattled marines on a mining world where the enemy refuses a fair fight. Ambushes, sabotage, and local double-dealing turn the mission ugly fast.
The Reservist
by Jason Anspach
2019
Sergeant Fetch and the Caledonian Reserve Legion Corps were promised limited duty on a gentle homeworld. After Kublar, they are thrown into a meat grinder where reserve status means nothing.
Through the Nether
by Jason Anspach
2019
Soren Voss leaves a promising Navy path for covert service in the shadows. Nether Ops shows him truths about the Republic that duty alone may not survive.
Always Legion
by Peter Nealen
2023
The Legion's code endures through defeat, distance, and impossible orders. This Galaxy's Edge story keeps the focus on soldiers who refuse to stop being legionnaires when the galaxy shifts.
Callsign: Valkyrie
by Jason Anspach
2023
A Galaxy's Edge side mission follows a warrior whose callsign carries both skill and danger. In a universe built on hard choices, survival depends on nerve under fire.
The Lost Legion
by Jason Anspach
2024
A lost piece of Legion history surfaces, bringing danger with it. The search reveals what men will risk for brothers-in-arms, memory, and the truth behind a vanished unit.
Series background & context
Galaxy's Edge: Order Of The Centurion is a spin-off line built around the Legion's idea of remembered valor. These stories do not always follow the main Galaxy's Edge cast. Instead, they focus on soldiers, officers, and units who face moments so dangerous or costly that their names become part of Legion history. It is a smart way to widen the universe without losing the ground-level military feel.
The first book, Order of the Centurion, follows Lieutenant Washam on Psydon. He is tired of watching the war from a mobile command post and wants to do something that matters. When a covert mission gives him the chance, the story turns into a test of courage, command, and what a person is willing to risk when the easy choice is to stay safe.
The line keeps the camera close.
Other entries move through different corners of the galaxy and different kinds of service. Iron Wolves follows a proud company facing the kind of test that defines a unit. Stryker's War brings in a relief mission on a mining world where the enemy refuses to fight clean. Through the Nether heads into covert naval shadows. The Reservist gives reserve soldiers a war they were never meant to face. Madame Guillotine centers on a hostage crisis and one Marine sniper's refusal to leave people behind.
The tone is military, direct, and often bittersweet. These are not victory-lap stories. They are about the price paid by people who may never understand how large the consequences will become. That makes the line useful for readers who like the Legion but want more than the main heroes.
Start with Order of the Centurion if you want the clearest statement of the idea. After that, the books can be read as linked standalones, though they land better with some knowledge of Galaxy's Edge. Together they make the Legion feel less like a symbol and more like a long chain of people making hard choices.
The line is especially useful for readers who like military fiction because it treats recognition as complicated. Medals and titles matter, but they usually come after fear, loss, confusion, and choices nobody wanted to make. The stories look at the human cost before they look at the ceremony.
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