The Hunters Books in Order
Part ofChris Kuzneski Books in OrderGet The Hunters books by Chris Kuzneski in order, with plot summaries, series background, and guidance on how to follow the team through global treasure hunts.
Last updated: January 15, 2026
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Publication Order
3 books
The Prisoner's Gold
by Chris Kuzneski
2015
Guided by accounts of Marco Polo's travels, the Hunters search for a fortune he allegedly hid after serving in the court of Kublai Khan. Their quest across China pits them against a powerful criminal network determined to keep that treasure, and its implications, buried.
The Forbidden Tomb
by Chris Kuzneski
2014
The Hunters are hired to locate the legendary tomb of Alexander the Great and the riches said to be buried with him. Following scattered clues into Egypt, they clash with enemies willing to destroy a city rather than let the team reach the vault first.
The Hunters
by Chris Kuzneski
2013
Financed by a mysterious billionaire, soldier Jack Cobb leads a handpicked team that includes a historian, hacker, sniper, and thief. Their first assignment is to track down Romanian treasure trains that vanished in Russia during World War I before rival forces claim the multibillion dollar hoard.
Series background & context
The Hunters series spins out of the same fictional universe, but instead of a two man partnership it follows a full crew. A secretive billionaire builds an off the books team led by former soldier Jack Cobb, with historian Jasmine Park, hacker Hector Garcia, weapons expert Josh McNutt, and professional thief Sarah Ellis rounding out the roster.
Their mission is simple to explain and hard to carry out. Whenever history mentions a treasure that vanished without a trace, the Hunters are the people called in to find it. The money behind them means private jets, custom gear, and global reach, but it also means strings that are not always visible at first.
In the opening novel The Hunters, the team is thrown together and immediately tested. They are asked to locate two Romanian trains loaded with gold and national treasures that disappeared in Russia during the chaos of the First World War. The job forces them to infiltrate hardened compounds, outthink rival criminals, and learn to trust each other under fire even though they barely know one another.
The second book, The Forbidden Tomb, takes the crew to Egypt and beyond in search of the lost tomb of Alexander the Great. What begins as a carefully planned excavation turns into a disaster when enemies trigger violence on a massive scale. The Hunters find themselves trying to save hostages and limit destruction even as they race toward one of the most coveted burial sites in history.
In The Prisoner's Gold, which later won a major thriller award, the team follows the trail of Marco Polo's hidden wealth. Centuries earlier, Polo traveled through the empire of Kublai Khan and is believed to have stashed an enormous fortune before returning to Italy. Modern criminal networks do not want that treasure disturbed, so the Hunters must navigate both ancient clues and present day power struggles across China.
Compared with the Payne & Jones books, the Hunters novels feel closer to a heist film. There are planning scenes, technical breakdowns, and shifting roles inside the group. Each member brings a distinct skill set and personality, from Garcia's nervous brilliance behind a keyboard to McNutt's relaxed attitude toward high explosives, and their clashes are as much a part of the appeal as the puzzles they solve.
The series also trades on the larger Kuzneski universe. Historian Petr Ulster appears, and small references link back to events in the Payne & Jones adventures, so longtime readers get a sense of continuity. The cinematic pacing and big set pieces helped the books get optioned for film, but on the page they remain grounded in details of geography, engineering, and history that make the wild missions feel just plausible enough.
Taken together, The Hunters trilogy offers high energy treasure hunts with a strong team dynamic. Each book focuses on a new legendary prize, yet threads about their mysterious backers and the cost of this life run underneath. New readers can start with The Hunters and follow the mission list straight through, watching a crew of strangers turn into something like a family.
Edited by
Software engineer whose passion for tracking book recommendations from podcasts inspired the creation of MRB.
Lead investor at 3one4 Capital whose startup expertise and love for books helped shaped MRB and its growth.

















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