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The Boston Brahmin Books in Order

Part ofSteven Konkoly Books in Order

This page covers The Boston Brahmin series by Steven Konkoly, with reading order, short summaries, series background, and where to begin.

Last updated: June 7, 2026

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Publication Order

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The Loyal Nine

by Steven Konkoly

2015

America is wobbling under social unrest, economic pressure, and political gamesmanship when a hidden patriotic network steps forward. Descendants of the founders are pulled into a cyber-age struggle over who gets to shape the republic.

Series background & context

The Boston Brahmin books sit on the political side of Konkoly's thriller world. Instead of starting with an outbreak or a covert raid, the series begins with a country already under strain, social unrest rising, foreign pressure building, and the economy looking far less stable than people want to believe.

The collapse is not abstract here. It is being pushed.

The core idea behind the series is that America can be attacked without a conventional invasion. Money, infrastructure, cyber systems, public trust, and political influence can all be turned into weapons. That gives the story a different rhythm from Konkoly's more military-first books. There is still action, but a lot of the tension comes from watching institutions bend before they break.

At the heart of the setup is a secretive patriotic network called the Loyal Nine, modern figures tied to the country's founding legacy and pulled into a struggle over what the republic is becoming. That historical echo matters. The Boston title is not just decoration. The series uses old American symbolism, elite power, and revolutionary memory to frame a very modern fight over influence, control, and national identity.

What makes the premise interesting is the clash of classes and motives. Wealthy power brokers, political leaders, foreign interests, and citizens trying to hold the line all want different things, and very few of them play fair. The result is a tense, near-future political thriller with a prepper edge. You can feel Konkoly's interest in fragile systems and civic stress all through it.

The tone is ominous rather than flashy. The threat is not only the bad thing that might happen next. It is the realization that the country's defenses, legal, digital, financial, and moral, may already be compromised. That sense of quiet erosion gives the series its shape.

If you like thrillers where cyberwar, economic pressure, and political manipulation matter as much as bullets, this is the lane The Boston Brahmin occupies. It asks what a modern republic looks like when powerful people decide the rules are optional.

And in Konkoly's hands, that question never feels comfortably theoretical.

Edited by

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Anurag Ramdasan

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