John Dortmunder Books in Order
How to Read the John Dortmunder series
Mostly standalone stories with recurring characters in a shared setting.
The series can be enjoyed in any order, as most books function as standalone capers with minimal overarching plot. Each novel introduces or reintroduces the core cast, the setting, and Dortmunder’s world without requiring prior knowledge. While subtle references to past jobs or character quirks appear occasionally, there’s no significant character progression, family saga, or serialized storyline—Dortmunder remains perpetually middle-aged, perpetually broke, and perpetually unlucky. Readers can dip in anywhere for fresh laughs without missing essential context, though starting from the beginning offers the pleasure of seeing the crew and gags evolve slightly over time.
About the John Dortmunder series
Series Premise
The core premise follows John Archibald Dortmunder, a career criminal and meticulous planner who assembles a ragtag crew for audacious thefts—jewels, cash, art, even entire buildings—only for fate, coincidence, incompetence, or sheer bad luck to derail everything spectacularly. Dortmunder schemes with precision, assigning roles to his reliable (if eccentric) accomplices, yet external forces—greedy clients, shifting circumstances, police interference, or simple cosmic irony—ensure the jobs unravel in increasingly hilarious ways. The humor arises not from slapstick but from the relentless piling up of complications, Dortmunder’s deadpan pessimism, and the way ordinary human flaws turn brilliant ideas into disasters. Each caper offers a self-contained adventure with clever twists, satisfying payoffs, and Dortmunder ending up no richer (and often more exasperated) than he began.
Main Characters
Leading the pack is John Dortmunder himself, a tall, dour, perpetually worried professional thief in his prime, with a mournful face, a taste for simple pleasures (beer, silence), and an uncanny knack for anticipating disaster—yet he persists. His long-suffering partner is May, a chain-smoking cashier at a supermarket who met Dortmunder when she caught him shoplifting; their domestic life offers quiet stability amid the chaos. Andy Kelp, Dortmunder’s optimistic, gadget-loving friend, often drags him into jobs with infectious enthusiasm and questionable ideas. The core crew includes Stan Murch, a masterful getaway driver obsessed with routes and traffic; Tiny Bulcher, a massive, intimidating enforcer with surprising gentleness toward friends; and occasional additions like Wally Knurr or J.C. Taylor, who bring their own eccentric skills. Antagonists shift per book—greedy employers, rival crooks, or hapless authorities—while recurring figures like the O.J. bartender or various fences add texture.
Setting
The setting is primarily contemporary (mid-to-late 20th century) New York City and its environs, rendered with affectionate realism. The city’s streets, bars, apartments, museums, banks, and suburban hideouts provide the stage for heists that exploit urban chaos—traffic jams, construction sites, bureaucratic red tape, or eccentric New Yorkers who complicate matters. Dortmunder’s favorite hangout, the O.J. Bar (where the bartender never quite hears the orders right), serves as a recurring hub for plotting and commiseration, while jobs take the crew from Manhattan high-rises to upstate retreats or Jersey suburbs. The New York flavor—gritty, crowded, endlessly surprising—fuels the comedy and keeps the stakes grounded in everyday absurdity.
Tone & Themes
The tone is wry, dryly humorous, and cheerfully cynical, blending sophisticated comedy with gentle mockery of both criminals and authority. Westlake’s prose is crisp, economical, and packed with understated wit—dialogue crackles, descriptions are economical, and the absurdity builds organically rather than forced. It’s light without being frivolous, never mean-spirited, and always affectionate toward its flawed characters. Themes explore the futility of perfect planning in an imperfect world, the inevitability of bad luck, loyalty among misfits, the thin line between genius and folly, and the quiet dignity of the professional crook who sticks to his code even when everything goes sideways. Underlying it all is a celebration of resilience—Dortmunder never quits, never loses his dry humor, and somehow keeps going despite the universe’s best efforts to thwart him.
In the end, the John Dortmunder series delights as a masterclass in comic timing and human folly, where the perfect crime remains forever just out of reach and laughter is the only reliable score. Donald E. Westlake gifts readers a world where brilliance meets bungling, pessimism meets perseverance, and even the unluckiest crook can claim a certain stubborn dignity. The books leave you grinning at life’s absurdities, rooting for the underdog who never quite wins big but never stops trying—a timeless reminder that in the grand heist of existence, the real treasure is the company you keep and the jokes you share along the way.
FAQ
17 books total: 14 main + 2 extra stories + 1 companion book
No new book is currently scheduled. The latest book, Give Till It Hurts, was published in October 2010.
Give Till It Hurts was published in October 2010.
The first book in the series is The Hot Rock, published in May 1970.
The series primarily falls into the Crime genre.
No, the books do not need to be read in order. Each story stands on its own, but recurring characters and the shared setting connect the series.
The core premise follows John Archibald Dortmunder, a career criminal and meticulous planner who assembles a ragtag crew for audacious thefts—jewels, cash, art, even entire buildings—only for fate, coincidence, incompetence, or sheer bad luck to derail everything spectacularly. Dortmunder schemes with precision, assigning roles to his reliable (if eccentric) accomplices, yet external forces—greedy clients, shifting circumstances, police interference, or simple cosmic irony—ensure the jobs unravel in increasingly hilarious ways. The humor arises not from slapstick but from the relentless piling up of complications, Dortmunder’s deadpan pessimism, and the way ordinary human flaws turn brilliant ideas into disasters. Each caper offers a self-contained adventure with clever twists, satisfying payoffs, and Dortmunder ending up no richer (and often more exasperated) than he began.
The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.