I've been a Stephen Hunter fan for years now....it get's frustrating that I can read them faster than he can write new ones.
I recommend new fans buy all the Hunter books from Amazon, then figure out what order to read them in.
So far my absolute favorite is Dirty White Boys!
There is an unofficial Stephen Hunter fan site here:
The Unofficial Stephen Hunter Website Unfortunately it doesn't look like it's been updated lately. It does list most of his books in order here:
Books by Stephen Hunter The newest two not listed are
I Sniper and
Dead Zero.
Hunter Books
I first learned of Hunter and his work when I read an interview with him in American Handgunner (reprinted here:
The Unofficial Stephen Hunter Website). In the magazine they talked a little bit more about
Pale Horse Coming, and I just had to read it. That got me hooked, and I've read all the rest of his books except
Target, which is a book adaptation of a movie. I'm in the middle of reading
American Gunfight, which is a factual account of the assassination attempt on Harry Truman in 1950.
Pale Horse Coming was a hoot, with thinly veiled characters based on real life gun writers and pistoleros. Totally implausible, but real fun to read.
Elmer Kaye (Elmer Keith)
Jack O'Brian (Jack O'Connor)
Ed McGriffin (Ed McGivern)
Audie Ryan (Audie Murphy)
Bill Jennings (Bill Jordan)
Charlie Hatchison (Charles Askins)
Hunter has a great talent at describing guns and shooting, with not just technical descriptions but is able to evoke the smell of burning powder, the greasy feel of lead bullets, the thump of recoil and slap of muzzle blast - the viscera of the experience.
His primary characters have been Bob Lee Swagger and his father Earl, but I love the way he interweaves characters from his earlier books - for instance the Russian mentioned in previous posts, and Frenchy Short.
Havana has several characters like that. However Earl didn't live long enough to have a lot of adventures so that well is pretty much dry, and Bob Lee is getting too old. In his latest book
Dead Zero Hunter has introduced a new character Ray Cruz whom he can continue with, thanks to a
deus ex machina.
My personal favorite is
Hot Springs, and I wish he'd go back to explore a character from that book - Charles Swagger, Earl's father and Bob Lee's grandfather. How did he actually come to be shot in that Hot Springs whorehouse? Did he really drive Earl's brother to suicide? Was he really as bad as Earl thought he was? I suppose it's possible, considering that Lamar Pye from
Dirty White Boys shared some of Charles's genes.
Regardless, I'd like for Hunter to flesh out this part of the Swagger clan, and read his take on an early 20th century Bible thumping, head thumping, fire and brimstone Arkansas lawman.