Sophie Racine Assassin Thriller Books in Order
Part ofAlex Shaw Books in OrderExplore the Sophie Racine Assassin Thrillers by Alex Shaw with books in order, brief summaries, series background and clear guidance on where to start reading.
Last updated: January 13, 2026
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Publication Order
1 book
Traitors
by Alex Shaw
2021
French intelligence officer Sophie Racine heads into war-torn eastern Ukraine to assassinate the Russian mole who destroyed her service from within. At the same time, ex SAS operative Aidan Snow is sent to extract a trapped civilian, and when their missions collide both become hunted targets in a shifting battlefield.
Series background & context
The Sophie Racine Assassin Thriller series follows a French intelligence officer who is as comfortable at a diplomatic reception as she is on the front line. Sophie Racine works in a world where the neat borders of Europe blur into active warzones, and where a decision made in Paris can cost lives on the streets of Donetsk.
In Traitors, the first book, Racine is tasked with travelling into the heart of the conflict in eastern Ukraine. Her mission is surgical and brutal. She must find and kill a Russian mole who has torn her own service apart piece by piece, feeding secrets to Moscow and leaving careers, and people, in ruins. The assignment forces her to balance professional focus with very personal anger.
At the same time, ex SAS soldier and MI6 officer Aidan Snow is operating in the same region, sent to extract a British citizen caught behind rebel lines. When Racine’s assassination brief collides with Snow’s rescue mission, both operatives find that their carefully planned operations shatter. Surrounded by rival militias, Russian backed forces and shifting local loyalties, they become targets as much as hunters.
This series lives in the overlap between espionage and modern warfare. Racine has the training and cover identities of a classic spy, but her work unfolds under artillery fire, in cities divided by checkpoints and in territories where no one is really in control. The tone is tense and grounded. Surveillance, informers and cut outs matter, yet so do body armour, evacuation routes and whether an ally will still be alive in the morning.
Racine herself is drawn as capable and relentless, but not unbreakable. She deals with the casual sexism of some colleagues, the political pressure from above and the knowledge that every decision carries a moral cost. The presence of characters like Aidan Snow, and later links to other operators in Alex Shaw’s universe, reinforce the sense that she is part of a wider, messy intelligence community rather than a lone assassin.
Readers coming to the Sophie Racine books can expect sharp tradecraft, tense set pieces and a heroine who thinks as quickly as she fights. The stories examine loyalty, betrayal and the price of revenge, all against a backdrop of real world tensions in Ukraine and Europe. It is a series for readers who like their spy fiction firmly rooted in current conflicts, with a lead who refuses to look away from what those conflicts do to the people caught in them.
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