Solomon Church Books in Order
Part ofMorgan Greene Books in OrderFind the Solomon Church books by Morgan Greene in order, with short summaries, series background, and simple guidance on where to begin.
Last updated: June 7, 2026
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Publication Order
2 books
The Exile
by Morgan Greene
2025
Solomon Church, an ex-SAS operative living off the grid, was betrayed and left for dead years ago. When a former target rises toward power, Church comes out of hiding to settle the debt.
The Fury
by Morgan Greene
2025
A wave of bombings across Europe carries echoes of Church's early mission in Kosovo. To stop the attacks, he must connect the present violence to a war story that never stopped bleeding.
Series background & context
The Solomon Church series moves Morgan Greene into military and espionage thriller territory. Church is an ex-SAS operative with the kind of past that does not stay buried, no matter how far off-grid he tries to live. He is trained for covert work, violence and survival, but the books are not just about skills. They are about old missions going wrong, powerful men avoiding consequences and one damaged man deciding he is done hiding.
The Exile opens the series with betrayal. Years earlier, Church and his team were sent into the Democratic Republic of the Congo on a mission tied to General Zawadi, a warlord profiting from a cobalt slave mine. The operation collapsed, Church was left for dead, and the people involved moved on with their lives. Church did not. When Sir Walter Blackthorn, a businessman connected to that past, begins moving toward political power in Britain, Church comes out of the shadows.
That first book sets the pattern. There are flashbacks, present-day conspiracies and action scenes built around special forces training rather than police procedure. Church is not Jamie Johansson with different boots. He works outside the system because the system is often part of the problem, or too slow to matter.
He is not looking for applause.
The Fury digs into another old wound, this time reaching back to Kosovo in 1999. A string of bombings across Europe carries signs Church recognizes from one of his first missions. The past and present start to overlap, and the question is not only who is setting the bombs, but why a war from decades ago is still claiming lives.
The series has a broader international feel than the Jamie books. It moves through conflict zones, political circles, intelligence contacts and the private guilt carried by soldiers who were asked to do ugly work. The pace is direct, with shootouts, betrayals and hard choices, but Greene still gives Church a moral line. It may be rough. It may be personal. But it is there.
Readers who met Solomon Church in the Jamie Johansson world will recognize the same sense of danger, only turned toward espionage and military revenge. Start with The Exile, because it explains Church’s betrayal, his enemy and the rules he lives by. Then move to The Fury for a second mission that shows how wide, and how painful, his history really is.
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