The Gunsmith book cover

The Gunsmith Series in Order

The Gunsmith Books in Order

490 books total 200 main + 290 companion books
#
Title
Date
Rating
201
Oct 1998
202
Nov 1998
203
Dec 1998
204
Jan 1999
209
Jun 1999
211
Aug 1999
212
Sep 1999
220
Apr 2000
221
May 2000
222
Jun 2000
223
Jun 2000
224
Aug 2000
227
Oct 2000
229
Jan 2001
230
Jan 2001
231
Feb 2001
232
Apr 2001
234
Jun 2001
235
Jul 2001
237
Sep 2001
238
Oct 2001
239
Oct 2001
240
Nov 2001
241
Jan 2002
242
Feb 2002
243
Mar 2002
245
Apr 2002
246
May 2002
247
Jun 2002
248
Jul 2002
249
Aug 2002
251
Nov 2002
253
Jan 2003
254
Feb 2003
255
Mar 2003
256
Apr 2003
257
May 2003
258
Jun 2003
259
Jul 2003
260
Aug 2003
261
Sep 2003
262
Oct 2003
263
Oct 2003
264
Nov 2003
265
Jan 2004
266
Feb 2004
267
Mar 2004
268
Apr 2004
269
May 2004
270
Jun 2004
271
Jul 2004
272
Aug 2004
274
Oct 2004
275
Nov 2004
276
Dec 2004
277
Dec 2004
279
Feb 2005
280
Mar 2005
281
Apr 2005
282
May 2005
284
Jul 2005
285
Aug 2005
287
Oct 2005
289
Jan 2006
290
Feb 2006
291
Mar 2006
292
Apr 2006
293
May 2006
294
Jun 2006
295
Jul 2006
296
Aug 2006
297
Sep 2006
298
Oct 2006
299
Nov 2006
301
Jan 2007
303
Mar 2007
304
Apr 2007
305
May 2007
306
Jun 2007
310
Oct 2007
313
Jan 2008
314
Feb 2008
316
Apr 2008
318
Jun 2008
319
Jul 2008
320
Aug 2008
321
Sep 2008
324
Dec 2008
325
Jan 2009
326
Feb 2009
328
Apr 2009
330
Jun 2009
335
Nov 2009
336
Dec 2009
337
Jan 2010
346
Oct 2010
349
Jan 2011
352
Apr 2011
353
May 2011
354
Jun 2011
355
Jul 2011
357
Sep 2011
358
Oct 2011
362
Feb 2012
363
Mar 2012
367
Jul 2012
369
Sep 2012
373
Dec 2012
374
Feb 2013
376
Apr 2013
378
Jun 2013
380
Aug 2013
381
Sep 2013
385
Jan 2014
386
Feb 2014
387
Mar 2014
388
Mar 2014
396
Nov 2014
397
Jan 2015
398
Feb 2015

About The Gunsmith series

Series Premise

Clint Adams is the fastest, most accurate gunsmith and shootist in the West—a man whose reputation precedes him wherever he goes. He is not a traditional lawman; instead, he is a wandering craftsman who repairs and customizes firearms, often taking side jobs as a bodyguard, tracker, or unofficial troubleshooter when the need (or the money) arises. Clint is drawn into trouble through a combination of his fame (people seek him out for help or challenge him to prove their speed), his moral code (he cannot walk away from injustice), and sheer bad luck (he frequently stumbles into the middle of range wars, bank robberies, or revenge plots). Each novel follows a familiar but reliable formula: - Clint arrives in a new town to deliver or repair a gun, visit an old friend, or simply pass through. - He becomes entangled in a local conflict—cattle rustling, land grabs, corrupt sheriffs, outlaw gangs, or personal vendettas. - He uses his unmatched gunfighting skill, blacksmith knowledge, and street-smart instincts to protect the innocent, expose the guilty, and usually bed one or more attractive women along the way. - The story culminates in a climactic shootout or showdown where Clint’s superior speed and accuracy prevail. The series celebrates the classic Western archetype of the lone gunman who rights wrongs in a lawless land, but with a harder, more adult edge than traditional family Westerns.

Main Characters

Clint Adams ("The Gunsmith"): The protagonist—a tall, lean, dark-haired man in his 30s–40s with a legendary reputation as the fastest gun alive. He is a master gunsmith who can repair, customize, or build any firearm, and his skill with a Colt is unmatched. Clint is honorable, loyal to friends, protective of women and children, and deeply distrustful of authority. He avoids long-term commitments but forms deep (if temporary) romantic connections. He is not invincible—he gets shot, beaten, and exhausted—but he always survives through skill, cunning, and sheer will.
- Supporting/recurring:
- Jim West (occasional ally, U.S. Marshal).
- Rick Hartman (bartender and friend in Labarge, Wyoming—often provides information and a place to rest).
- Various women: Clint’s romantic partners change with each book—saloon girls, ranchers’ daughters, widows, schoolteachers—each relationship is passionate but temporary.
- Villains: Corrupt sheriffs, ruthless land barons, outlaw gangs, hired killers, and jealous rivals who underestimate Clint at their peril.

Setting

The setting is the post-Civil War American West (roughly 1870s–1890s), primarily the frontier territories and small towns of the Southwest and Plains states. Clint travels constantly—Texas, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, California, and occasionally Mexico—moving from one dusty cattle town to the next. Typical locations include:
- Saloons and whorehouses (where much of the action and romance begins).
- Small ranches and homesteads under threat.
- Mining towns, stagecoach stops, frontier forts, and cattle-drive trails.
- Occasionally larger cities like Denver, San Francisco, or Tombstone for variety.

The landscape is rugged and unforgiving: vast open ranges, desert badlands, mountain passes, river crossings, and isolated way stations. The era is the classic Wild West—lawmen are scarce, outlaws are bold, and disputes are settled with guns. The setting feels authentic and lived-in, with period details (six-shooters, Winchester rifles, horses, telegraph lines, early railroads) grounding the action in a believable frontier world.

Tone & Themes

The tone is gritty, straightforward, and unapologetically adult—pulp Western with a strong emphasis on action, sex, and moral clarity. The writing is fast-paced, direct, and functional: short sentences, quick scene changes, and plenty of gunplay keep the momentum high. Violence is frequent and graphic—shootings, stabbings, beatings, and hangings are described in detail—but it is never glorified; Clint kills only when necessary and often reflects on the cost. Sexual encounters are explicit, frequent, and enthusiastic (usually with willing partners), fitting the adult Western subgenre of the 1980s–1990s. Humor is dry and situational—Clint’s sarcasm, barroom banter, and the occasional bumbling villain provide light relief. The series is morally straightforward: good men (and women) protect the innocent, bad men die, and justice is delivered with hot lead. It is pure escapist entertainment—thrilling, satisfying, and unpretentious—designed to deliver a quick, visceral Western fix.

J.R. Roberts’ The Gunsmith series is a monumental, enduring pillar of the adult Western genre—delivering over 450 fast-paced, action-packed novels that follow the legendary adventures of Clint Adams, the fastest gun and finest gunsmith in the West. Across decades of frontier justice, the books celebrate the classic archetype of the lone, honorable gunman who rights wrongs, protects the innocent, and lives by his own code in a lawless land. With gritty shootouts, steamy romance, dry humor, and a clear moral line, the saga offers pure, unapologetic escapism—perfect for readers who crave high-stakes Western thrills with a harder, more adult edge. As Clint continues riding from town to town, righting injustices one blazing showdown at a time, *The Gunsmith* remains a timeless, addictive tribute to the Wild West’s enduring myth: a man, a gun, and the courage to stand against evil wherever it hides.

FAQ

How many books are in The Gunsmith series?

490 books total: 200 main + 290 companion books

When will the next book in the series be released?

No new book in the series is currently scheduled. The latest book, Invitation to a Bank Robbery, was published in June 2024.

When was the most recent book released?

Invitation to a Bank Robbery was published in June 2024.

What was the first book in the series?

The first book in the series is Macklin's Women, published in January 1982.

What genre is The Gunsmith series?

The series primarily falls into the Historical genre.

What is The Gunsmith series about?

Clint Adams is the fastest, most accurate gunsmith and shootist in the West—a man whose reputation precedes him wherever he goes. He is not a traditional lawman; instead, he is a wandering craftsman who repairs and customizes firearms, often taking side jobs as a bodyguard, tracker, or unofficial troubleshooter when the need (or the money) arises. Clint is drawn into trouble through a combination of his fame (people seek him out for help or challenge him to prove their speed), his moral code (he cannot walk away from injustice), and sheer bad luck (he frequently stumbles into the middle of range wars, bank robberies, or revenge plots). Each novel follows a familiar but reliable formula: - Clint arrives in a new town to deliver or repair a gun, visit an old friend, or simply pass through. - He becomes entangled in a local conflict—cattle rustling, land grabs, corrupt sheriffs, outlaw gangs, or personal vendettas. - He uses his unmatched gunfighting skill, blacksmith knowledge, and street-smart instincts to protect the innocent, expose the guilty, and usually bed one or more attractive women along the way. - The story culminates in a climactic shootout or showdown where Clint’s superior speed and accuracy prevail. The series celebrates the classic Western archetype of the lone gunman who rights wrongs in a lawless land, but with a harder, more adult edge than traditional family Westerns.

Is The Gunsmith series finished?

The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.