The Destroyer Books in Order
About The Destroyer series
Series Premise
Remo Williams, a tough, honest Newark, New Jersey cop, is framed for murdering a drug dealer and sentenced to death. His execution is faked by the U.S. government, and he is "recruited" into CURE—a secret, ultra-covert organization created by President John F. Kennedy to fight threats (crime, corruption, terrorism, foreign enemies) that the law cannot touch. CURE operates outside the Constitution, with a mandate to eliminate problems by any means necessary. Remo's identity is erased—he is declared dead—and he is trained to become the ultimate assassin: "The Destroyer." His teacher is Chiun, the ancient, cantankerous Korean Master of Sinanju—the legendary "sun source" of all martial arts (karate, kung fu, ninjutsu, etc., are said to derive from it). Chiun, the last true master from the poor Korean village of Sinanju, is hired by CURE to train Remo (the first non-Korean pupil), turning him into a superhuman killing machine capable of feats like stopping bullets with his fingertips, moving faster than the eye can follow, and killing with a finger flick. Remo and Chiun undertake impossible missions worldwide: assassinating untouchable criminals, foiling terrorist plots, dismantling conspiracies, or neutralizing threats to America—often with absurd humor and over-the-top action. The series satirizes bureaucracy, politics, media, and human folly while delivering pulp thrills.
Main Characters
> Remo Williams ("The Destroyer"): Protagonist—former cop turned super-assassin. Caucasian (Irish-Italian roots), sarcastic, street-smart, physically perfect after Sinanju training. Loyal to America but cynical about government; grows from reluctant killer to confident hero.
> Chiun: Remo's Korean mentor—ancient (appears elderly but timeless), vain, gold-obsessed Master of Sinanju. Deadly with a fingernail, hilariously arrogant, culturally proud (constantly insults Remo as "pale piece of pig fat"). Becomes Remo's father figure; wise, philosophical, and comedic.
> Harold W. Smith ("Emperor Smith"): Head of CURE—brilliant, ascetic, incorruptible former OSS/Yale law professor. Runs operations from a hidden Folcroft Sanitarium office; emotionless but deeply patriotic.
> Supporting/recurring: Various presidents (often unnamed or caricatured), CURE tech staff, villains (mad scientists, terrorists, corrupt officials), and occasional allies (Remo's daughter in later books, other Sinanju trainees).
Setting
Contemporary United States (primarily New York/New Jersey area, Washington D.C., and various U.S. cities) with global reach: missions take Remo and Chiun to Europe, Asia (including Korea), the Middle East, South America, and beyond. Settings range from urban streets, government buildings, and mob hideouts to exotic locales (jungles, palaces, secret labs). The world is grounded in 1970s–present-day reality but amplified for pulp: high-tech gadgets, shadowy agencies, and over-the-top villains. Sinanju (the Korean village) appears in flashbacks and visits as a poor fishing hamlet that exports assassins to fund itself.
Tone & Themes
Hilarious, irreverent, satirical, and over-the-top—black comedy mixed with action-adventure. The tone is tongue-in-cheek pulp parody: exaggerated violence (Remo folds people into origami or kills with pressure points), absurd villains (mad scientists, corrupt politicians, cartoonish terrorists), and sharp social/political satire (mocking government inefficiency, celebrity culture, fads, and hypocrisy). Humor dominates—Chiun's deadpan insults, Remo's wisecracks, and ridiculous situations—while action is fast, creative, and cartoonishly lethal. It's not grimdark; the series is fun, guilty-pleasure escapism with a wink at men's adventure tropes (like The Executioner or The Destroyer's own inspiration). Beneath the laughs lies a father-son bond between Remo and Chiun, adding warmth and depth.
The Destroyer series is a wild, hilarious pulp masterpiece—over 150 books of satirical action, absurd violence, and unforgettable characters that poke fun at everything from politics to pop culture. Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir created an enduring guilty pleasure: Remo and Chiun's father-son dynamic, Chiun's biting wit, and Remo's wisecracking heroism make it more than just men's adventure fiction—it's a comedic institution. With its blend of over-the-top kills, sharp satire, and underlying patriotism, the series remains addictive escapism for fans of irreverent thrillers—a timeless guilty pleasure that keeps delivering thrills and laughs decades later.
FAQ
153 books
No new book is currently scheduled. The latest book, Monumental Terror, was published in September 2019.
Monumental Terror was published in September 2019.
The first book in the series is Death Check, published in January 1972.
The series primarily falls into the Action Adventure genre.
Remo Williams, a tough, honest Newark, New Jersey cop, is framed for murdering a drug dealer and sentenced to death. His execution is faked by the U.S. government, and he is "recruited" into CURE—a secret, ultra-covert organization created by President John F. Kennedy to fight threats (crime, corruption, terrorism, foreign enemies) that the law cannot touch. CURE operates outside the Constitution, with a mandate to eliminate problems by any means necessary. Remo's identity is erased—he is declared dead—and he is trained to become the ultimate assassin: "The Destroyer." His teacher is Chiun, the ancient, cantankerous Korean Master of Sinanju—the legendary "sun source" of all martial arts (karate, kung fu, ninjutsu, etc., are said to derive from it). Chiun, the last true master from the poor Korean village of Sinanju, is hired by CURE to train Remo (the first non-Korean pupil), turning him into a superhuman killing machine capable of feats like stopping bullets with his fingertips, moving faster than the eye can follow, and killing with a finger flick. Remo and Chiun undertake impossible missions worldwide: assassinating untouchable criminals, foiling terrorist plots, dismantling conspiracies, or neutralizing threats to America—often with absurd humor and over-the-top action. The series satirizes bureaucracy, politics, media, and human folly while delivering pulp thrills.
The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.