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Rawlin Cash Books in Order

Browse Rawlin Cash books in order, with Jack Hunter reading order, quick summaries, series background, and a clear guide to where to start.

Last updated: July 8, 2026

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7 books

Jack Hunter: Origin Story

by Rawlin Cash

2018

Off the grid and trying to live a normal life, former CIA assassin Jack Hunter gets a call that his wife and daughter are missing. The hunt that follows becomes a brutal introduction to the man he used to be.

First Blood

by Rawlin Cash

2019

This prequel novella stays with Jack Hunter in the aftermath of personal loss, when grief and survival instinct start turning him back into a weapon. It adds another layer to the anger and scars he carries into the main series.

Super Sniper

by Rawlin Cash

2019

A dead president and stolen smart-bullet technology send Jack Hunter back into the fight. As a killer starts wiping out America's political leadership, he has to track an enemy who may be as skilled, and as ruthless, as he is.

Headshot

by Rawlin Cash

2020

Jack Hunter swore off the CIA, but a national crisis forces him back behind the rifle. As violence spreads and old missions haunt him, one impossible shot may be the only way to stop a wider war.

Hollow Point

by Rawlin Cash

2020

With North Korea in chaos, a kidnapped president, and a nuclear blast off Hawaii, Jack Hunter is dragged back from self-destruction. To stop a rogue general and avert a wider war, he has to function before he falls apart.

Defector

by Rawlin Cash

2022

Margot is missing, and Jack Hunter has to trust a defector to find the people holding her. This short, tense installment turns the series inward, trading battlefield scale for a desperate hunt shaped by loyalty and suspicion.

Edge of Darkness

by Rawlin Cash

2023

Jack Hunter is pushed back into another covert crisis where loyalties blur and the danger stays close. It continues the series' mix of sniper action, shadow politics, and a hero who never really gets to stand down.

Where should I start?

If you want the full backstory first: Jack Hunter: Origin StoryFirst BloodHeadshot
If you want the main series fast: HeadshotSuper SniperHollow Point
If you like bigger geopolitical stakes: Super SniperHollow PointDefector
If you want to keep going after the core run: DefectorEdge of Darkness

Author bio

Rawlin Cash keeps a very light public footprint. There is not much widely available personal background attached to the name, which means the books have to do the introducing. In this case, they do it with rifles, covert operations, and a main character who never stays out of trouble for long.

What is clear is the kind of fiction Cash likes to write.

His work centers on Jack Hunter, a former CIA assassin and elite sniper who tries to step away from violence and keeps getting pulled back in. The setup is pure modern thriller territory, but the books lean hard into movement, pressure, and fallout. Jack is not a polished spy with gadgets and charm. He is a blunt instrument with regrets, instincts, and just enough conscience to make every mission messier.

Cash's first known book under this name was Jack Hunter: Origin Story in 2018. That short prequel lays out the pain behind the character and frames Jack as a man who once tried to build an ordinary life. The follow-up prequel, First Blood, keeps working that seam, showing the anger and damage that shape him before the main run really takes off.

Then the series hits the gas. Headshot brings Jack back into the orbit of the CIA during a national emergency. Super Sniper escalates into political killings and advanced weapons tech. Hollow Point pushes the action toward a possible world war, while Defector narrows the focus to a more personal hunt. A later listed Jack Hunter title, Edge of Darkness, appears in public catalogs as a continuation of the series.

The release pattern matched the fiction. New Jack Hunter books appeared quickly across 2018, 2019, and 2020, with another installment arriving in 2022 and a later listed title in 2023. Even when the numbering gets a little messy across public catalogs, the reading experience is easy to understand: this is one long push through Jack Hunter's past, his missions, and his repeated failure to stay retired.

Speed matters here.

Cash writes the kind of thrillers that move fast and stay close to danger. The plots turn on assassins, hostile states, missing allies, covert programs, and governments under strain. The series blurbs also point to input from present and former national security operatives, which helps explain why the books put so much weight on tradecraft, weapons, and mission logic.

Readers who click with Rawlin Cash usually seem to be looking for a very specific experience: a wounded lone operator, high stakes, short chapters, and enough political conspiracy to keep the pressure high. Jack Hunter is the center of everything. He is tough, useful, and often half-broken, which gives the series more bite than a cleaner, more comfortable action hero might have.

There is also something interesting about how tightly focused the catalog is. Publicly, Rawlin Cash is almost entirely synonymous with Jack Hunter. There is no large body of unrelated novels attached to the name in the usual book databases. That makes the bibliography feel compact and pointed, like Cash knows the lane and stays in it.

So if you are coming to Rawlin Cash fresh, the easiest introduction is simple. Start with Headshot if you want the main event, or begin with Jack Hunter: Origin Story if you want the emotional wound before the wider war starts. Either way, you will meet an author whose public story is quiet, but whose fiction is built to move.

Edited by

Richard Reis

Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.

Anurag Ramdasan

Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

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