Killmaster Books In Order
Publication Order of Nick Carter: Killmaster Books
Run, Spy, Run | (1964) | |
The China Doll | (1964) | |
Checkmate in Rio | (1964) | |
Safari for Spies | (1964) | |
Fraulein Spy | (1964) | |
Saigon | (1964) | |
A Bullet for Fidel | (1965) | |
The 13th Spy | (1965) | |
Eyes of the Tiger | (1965) | |
Istanbul | (1965) | |
Web of Spies | (1966) | |
Spy Castle | (1966) | |
Terrible Ones | (1966) | |
Dragon Flame | (1966) | |
Hanoi | (1966) | |
Danger Key | (1966) | |
Operation Starvation | (1966) | |
Mind Poisoners | (1966) | |
The Weapon Of Night | (1967) | |
Golden Serpent | (1967) | |
Mission to Venice | (1967) | |
Double Identity | (1967) | |
The Devil’s Cockpit | (1967) | |
The Chinese Paymaster | (1967) | |
Seven Against Greece | (1967) | |
A Korean Tiger | (1967) | |
Assignment Israel | (1967) | |
Red Guard | (1967) | |
The filthy five | (1967) | |
The Bright Blue Death | (1967) | |
Macao | (1968) | |
Operation Moon Rocket | (1968) | |
The Judas Spy | (1968) | |
Hood of Death | (1968) | |
Amsterdam | (1968) | |
Temple of Fear | (1968) | |
Fourteen Seconds to Hell | (1968) | |
The Defector | (1969) | |
Carnival for Killing | (1969) | |
Rhodesia | (1969) | |
The Red Rays | (1969) | |
Peking: The Tulip affair | (1969) | |
The Amazon | (1969) | |
The Sea Trap | (1969) | |
Berlin | (1969) | |
The Cobra Kill | (1969) | |
Human Time Bomb | (1969) | |
Living Death | (1969) | |
Operation Che Guevara | (1969) | |
The Doomsday Formula | (1969) | |
Operation Snake | (1969) | |
The Casbah Killers | (1969) | |
The Red Rebellion | (1970) | |
The Executioners | (1970) | |
Black Death | (1970) | |
The Mind Killers | (1970) | |
Time Clock of Death | (1970) | |
Cambodia | (1970) | |
The Death Strain | (1970) | |
Jewel of Doom | (1970) | |
Moscow | (1970) | |
The Arab Plague / Slavemaster | (1970) | |
Ice Bomb Zero | (1971) | |
Mark of Cosa Nostra | (1972) | |
The Cairo Mafia / Cairo | (1972) | |
Inca Death Squad | (1973) | |
Assault on England | (1973) | |
The Omega Terror | (1973) | |
Code Name: Werewolf | (1973) | |
Strike Force Terror | (1973) | |
Agent Counter-agent | (1973) | |
Hour of the Wolf | (1973) | |
Our Agent in Rome Is Missing | (1973) | |
Kremlin File | (1973) | |
Spanish Connection | (1973) | |
The Death’s Head Conspiracy | (1973) | |
The Peking Dossier | (1973) | |
Target: Doomsday Island | (1974) | |
Night of the Avenger | (1974) | |
Butcher of Belgrade | (1974) | |
Assassination Brigade | (1974) | |
Liquidator, The | (1974) | |
Devil’s Dozen | (1974) | |
Ice-Trap Terror | (1974) | |
Assassin Code Name Vulture | (1974) | |
The Stolen Pay Train, | (1974) | |
Massacre in Milan | (1974) | |
Vatican Vendetta | (1974) | |
Sign of the Cobra | (1974) | |
Man Who Sold Death | (1974) | |
The N3 Conspiracy | (1974) | |
Beirut Incident | (1974) | |
Death of the Falcon | (1974) | |
The Aztec Avenger | (1974) | |
The Code | (1975) | |
The Jerusalem File | (1975) | |
Counterfeit Agent | (1975) | |
Six Bloody Summer Days | (1975) | |
The Katmandu Contract | (1975) | |
The Z Document | (1975) | |
Dr. Death | (1975) | |
Ultimate Code | (1975) | |
Assignment Intercept | (1976) | |
Green Wolf Connection | (1976) | |
The Fanatics of Al Asad | (1976) | |
The Snake Flag Conspiracy | (1976) | |
The Turncoat | (1976) | |
The Sign of the Prayer Shawl | (1976) | |
Vulcan Disaster | (1976) | |
A High Yield In Death | (1976) | |
Nichovev Plot, The | (1976) | |
Triple Cross | (1976) | |
The Gallagher Plot | (1976) | |
Plot for the Fourth Reich | (1977) | |
Death Message | (1978) | |
The List | (1978) | |
Under the Wall | (1978) | |
The Ebony Cross | (1978) | |
Deadly Doubles | (1978) | |
Race of Death | (1978) | |
Trouble in Paradise | (1978) | |
The Pamplona Affair | (1978) | |
The Doomsday Spore | (1978) | |
Revenge of the Generals | (1979) | |
The Asian Mantrap | (1979) | |
Thunderstrike In Syria | (1979) | |
The Redolmo Affair | (1979) | |
The Jamaican Exchange | (1979) | |
Tropical Deathpact | (1979) | |
The Pemex Chart | (1979) | |
Hawaii | (1979) | |
The Satan Trap | (1979) | |
Reich Four | (1979) | |
The Nowhere Weapon | (1979) | |
Strike of the Hawk | (1980) | |
Day of the Dingo | (1980) | |
Tarantula Strike | (1980) | |
Ten Times Dynamite | (1980) | |
Eighth Card Stud | (1980) | |
The Suicide Seat | (1980) | |
Death Mission: Havana | (1980) | |
The Coyote Connection | (1981) | |
The G Man | (1981) | |
The Society of Nine | (1981) | |
The Golden Bull | (1981) | |
The Dubrovnik Massacre | (1981) | |
The Solar Menace | (1981) | |
The Strontium Code | (1981) | |
Pleasure Island | (1981) | |
Cauldron of Hell | (1981) | |
The Parisian Affair | (1981) | |
Turkish Bloodbath | (1982) | |
Chessmaster | (1982) | |
The Last Samurai | (1982) | |
The Puppet Master | (1982) | |
The Dominican Affair | (1982) | |
The Damocles Threat | (1982) | |
Earth Shaker | (1982) | |
The Treason Game | (1982) | |
Deathlight | (1982) | |
The Israeli Connection | (1982) | |
Norwegian Typhoon | (1982) | |
The Hunter | (1982) | |
Operation McMurdo Sound | (1982) | |
Appointment in Haiphong | (1982) | |
Retreat for Death | (1982) | |
The Mendoza Manuscript | (1982) | |
The Death Star Affair | (1982) | |
Doctor DNA | (1982) | |
Typhoon Ray | (1982) | |
The Christmas Kill | (1982) | |
The Greek Summit | (1982) | |
The Outback Ghosts | (1983) | |
Hide and Go Die | (1983) | |
The Kali Death Cult | (1983) | |
Operation Vendetta | (1983) | |
The Yukon Target | (1983) | |
The Death Dealer | (1983) | |
The Istanbul Decision | (1983) | |
The Decoy Hit | (1983) | |
Earthfire North | (1983) | |
The Budapest Run | (1983) | |
Caribbean Coup | (1984) | |
The Algarve Affair | (1984) | |
Zero-Hour Strike Force | (1984) | |
Operation Sharkbite | (1984) | |
Death Island | (1984) | |
Night of the Warheads | (1984) | |
Day of the Mahdi | (1984) | |
Assignment: Rio | (1984) | |
Death Hand Play | (1984) | |
The Kremlin Kill | (1984) | |
The Mayan Connection | (1984) | |
San Juan Inferno | (1984) | |
Circle of Scorpions | (1985) | |
The Blue Ice Affair | (1985) | |
The Macao Massacre | (1985) | |
Pursuit of the Eagle | (1985) | |
The Vengeance Game | (1985) | |
Last Flight to Moscow | (1985) | |
The Normandy Code | (1985) | |
White Death | (1985) | |
The Assassin Convention | (1985) | |
Blood of the Scimitar | (1985) | |
The Execution Exchange | (1985) | |
The Tarlov Cipher | (1985) | |
Target Red Star | (1986) | |
The Killing Ground | (1986) | |
The Berlin Target | (1986) | |
Mercenary Mountain | (1986) | |
Blood Ultimatum | (1986) | |
The Cyclops Conspiracy | (1986) | |
Tunnel for Traitors | (1986) | |
The Samurai Kill | (1986) | |
Terror Times Two | (1986) | |
Death Orbit | (1986) | |
Slaughter Day | (1986) | |
The Master Assassin | (1986) | |
Operation Petrograd | (1986) | |
Crossfire Red | (1987) | |
Blood of the Falcon | (1987) | |
Death Squad | (1987) | |
The Terror Code | (1987) | |
Holy War | (1987) | |
Blood Raid | (1987) | |
East of Hell | (1987) | |
Killing Games | (1987) | |
Terms of Vengeance | (1987) | |
Pressure Point | (1987) | |
Night of the Condor | (1987) | |
The Poseidon Target | (1987) | |
The Andropov File | (1988) | |
Dragonfire | (1988) | |
Bloodtrail to Mecca | (1988) | |
Deathstrike | (1988) | |
Lethal Prey | (1988) | |
Spykiller | (1988) | |
Bolivian Heat | (1988) | |
The Rangoon Man | (1988) | |
Code Name Cobra | (1988) | |
Afghan Intercept | (1988) | |
Countdown to Armageddon | (1988) | |
Black Sea Bloodbath | (1988) | |
The Deadly Diva | (1989) | |
Invitation to Death | (1989) | |
Day of the Assassin | (1989) | |
The Korean Kill | (1989) | |
Middle East Massacre | (1989) | |
Sanction to Slaughter | (1989) | |
Holiday in Hell | (1989) | |
Law of the Lion | (1989) | |
Hong Kong Hit | (1989) | |
Deep Sea Death | (1989) | |
Arms of Vengeance | (1989) | |
Hell-Bound Express | (1989) | |
Isle of Blood | (1989) | |
Singapore Sling | (1990) | |
Ruby Red Death | (1990) | |
Arctic Abduction | (1990) | |
Dragon Slay | (1990) |
Killmaster is a series of novels written by several authors who write under the pseudonym Nick Carter. Between 1964 and 1990, the series of novels were published like baseball cards with at least 261 titles in print by 1991. The first novel in the series was “Run, Spy, Run” that was first published in February 1964 and featured the lead protagonist Nick Carter. The Nick Carter character was not a new character as he was an update of a pulp fiction character that first appeared in a comic in 1886. With the first novel in the series flying off the shelves, the authors of the series turned prolific, publishing hundreds of novels in the ever more popular series. Even as no actual author is credited with the writing of the series, the novels are believed to have been written by Martin Cruz Smith, David Hagberg, Robert J. Randisi, Gayle Lynds, Dennis Lynds, Mnning Lee, Valerie Moolman, and Michael Avallone among several others. The Nick Carter series of novels were created to cash in on the James Bond phenomenon that was taking over the movies hence the creation of Nick Carter as a man’s man. With 261 titles in print, the Killmaster series of novels sold over 30 million copies by the time it wrapped up in 1991. The series has a fair amount of variation in quality and style though the quality is fairly similar, even as they are written by different authors. Even so the novels have some differences including some novels in which Carter is portrayed as a shoot first hero as opposed to the contemplative agent, and first person narration versus third person.
Nick Carter is described as a lean, tall, and handsome man with wide-set steel-gray eyes that speak to danger and a magnificent muscled body. He has dark thick hair, a firm cleft chin, laugh lines around the eyes, a firm straight mouth and a hard face. On the inside of his right lower arm is the perfect AXE agent ID – a small tattoo of an axe. He also has several battle scars including a shrapnel scar on the shoulder and a knife scar on the thigh. Nick is an avid yoga practitioner doing his meditations for at least 15 minutes a day. He also has a prodigious talent for learning the languages and is fluent in over ten languages and basic skills in half a dozen others. Carter’s knowledge of the languages comes in handy, particularly in the early titles when he adopts several disguises executing his missions around the world. Nick Carter prefers to use a triad of weapons during his missions, all of which have their unique histories and names. A stripped down German Luger he calls Wilhelmina is his main weapon and is a throwback from his World War II combat days. The Benvenuto Cellini made 4-century-old knife he calls Hugo is the second member of the triad that he wears on his wrist. The last weapon in his repertoire is an egg-shaped device that is a poison bomb named Pierre, which he would activate with a simple twist. Nick works for the agency AXE a more secretive and smaller agency than the CIA, in being a trouble shooting and assassination arm of the US secret services.
The Killmaster series of novels opens to the lead protagonist waking up from an injury or libidinal stupor to respond to a call from his boss at AXE – nicknamed Hawk. His personal assistants are Chinese or Korean children he adopted in his previous missions to those countries. After getting a debrief from his boss, he goes deep undercover in a different country with an assumed identity. He will then make an ally from the most unexpected demographic such as women in uniform, expatriate Japanese, or Cold War Russians. His missions are always full of adverb-laden sex and torture from a communist mastermind that typically culminates in a clever escape that he orchestrates using his beloved Luger pistol, Wilhelmina. He will then perform a lot of yoga, which he describes as one excruciating experience that helps him develop endurance. He will typically stretch and hold his breath for five minutes or more, which is quite some record for an outdoorsy undercover man. His ambiguous ally will then die during one of his successful escapes, and he will have more sex as a kind of mourning for her. The novel will then end with Carter having sex or thinking about having sex with his most recent conquest. His typical sexual escapades are some racy savage and ravage fantasies that see him for the most part bed the local women, from wherever his mission will take him.
“Run, Spy, Run”, the first novel of the Killmaster series of novels is arguably the most James Bond inspired novel series. Set in 1963, it introduces Nick Carter who gets an anonymous letter while relaxing after coming back from a successful mission. On board the plane, he meets a minor diplomat who upon getting off the plane is blow to bits by a plane that had been hidden in his artificial hand. He is just one of a series of diplomats killed in similar explosions to be replaced by communist sympathizers. Meanwhile, Carter is paired up with Julia Byron and the two are assigned to protect Lyle Harcourt, the American ambassador to the UN. Investigating a foiled assassination attempt on the ambassador, they find that the American ambassador has been unusually interested in the case heightening their suspicions. But before they can bust the man, they are knocked out and sent to meet Mr. Judas, who intends to torture and murder them. Will they get out of this alive and will they thwart Mr. Judas’s plans.
“The China Doll”, the second novel in the series is a series about the ultimate elements of the spy that for Carter include savagery and sex. After the events of the first novel in the series, Nick has just come back to New York from where he hopes he can relax and unwind from a taxing assignment. He is now assigned to one of the most critical assignments in the country – he is to be the personal bodyguard of the Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushev, when the Russian leader visits the United States for the United Nations opening ceremony. As expected, it is not an easy assignment and Nick Carter foils two assassination attempts on the Russian premier. For the Soviet intelligence and their American counterparts, the most likely suspects in the assassinations are the Chinese. The Chinese have for some time been suspected of trying to destabilize relations between the United States and the USSR. Partnered up with a Russian agent, Nick Carter now has to deal with one of the most secretive and vicious terrorist gangs in the world.