The Trailsman book cover

The Trailsman Series in Order

The Trailsman Books in Order

396 books total 200 main + 196 companion books
#
Title
Date
Rating
6
May 1981
7
Jul 1981
8
Oct 1981
10
Apr 1982
11
Jul 1982
12
Oct 1982
13
Dec 1982
16
Apr 1983
18
Jun 1983
19
Jul 1983
20
Aug 1983
21
Sep 1983
22
Oct 1983
25
Jan 1984
26
Feb 1984
27
Mar 1984
28
Apr 1984
30
Jun 1984
32
Aug 1984
34
Oct 1984
35
Nov 1984
36
Dec 1984
37
Jan 1985
38
Feb 1985
39
Mar 1985
40
Apr 1985
42
Jun 1985
43
Jul 1985
44
Aug 1985
45
Sep 1985
46
Oct 1985
51
Mar 1986
52
Apr 1986
53
May 1986
54
Jun 1986
57
Sep 1986
59
Nov 1986
61
Jan 1987
64
Apr 1987
65
May 1987
66
Jun 1987
68
Aug 1987
70
Oct 1987
72
Dec 1987
74
Feb 1988
75
Mar 1988
76
Apr 1988
77
Mar 2004
79
Jul 1988
80
Aug 1988
81
Sep 1988
82
Oct 1988
84
Dec 1988
87
Mar 1989
88
Apr 1989
89
May 1989
90
Jun 1989
91
Jul 1989
92
Aug 1989
93
Sep 1989
95
Nov 1989
96
Dec 1989
97
Jan 1990
99
Mar 1990
100
Apr 1990
101
May 1990
103
Jul 1990
104
Aug 1990
105
Sep 1990
106
Oct 1990
107
Nov 1990
108
Dec 1990
110
Feb 1991
113
May 1991
115
Jul 1991
116
Aug 1991
117
Sep 1991
118
Oct 1991
119
Nov 1991
120
Dec 1991
121
Jan 1992
122
Feb 1992
123
Mar 1992
124
Apr 1992
125
May 1992
126
Jun 1992
127
Jul 1992
129
Sep 1992
132
Dec 1992
134
Feb 1993
135
Mar 1993
136
Apr 1993
138
Jun 1993
139
Jul 1993
141
Sep 1993
142
Oct 1993
143
Nov 1993
144
Dec 1993
147
Mar 1994
148
Apr 1994
150
Jun 1994
152
Aug 1994
153
Sep 1994
155
Nov 1994
156
Dec 1994
158
Feb 1995
160
Apr 1995
161
May 1995
163
Jul 1995
166
Oct 1995
168
Dec 1995
169
Jan 1996
170
Feb 1996
171
Mar 1996
172
Apr 1996
177
Sep 1996
178
Oct 1996
182
Feb 1997
183
Mar 1997
187
Jul 1997
188
Aug 1997
189
Nov 1997
190
Oct 1997
191
Nov 1997
192
Dec 1997
194
Feb 1998
196
Apr 1998
197
May 1998
198
Jun 1998
199
Jul 1998
201
Aug 1998

About The Trailsman series

Series Premise

The series follows the wandering exploits of Skye Fargo, the titular "Trailsman"—a legendary frontiersman, scout, tracker, and gunfighter who roams the American West in the mid-19th century (roughly 1850s–1870s). Fargo is a solitary drifter by choice, taking on jobs as a guide, protector, bounty hunter, or avenger whenever a trail leads him into trouble. Each standalone novel drops him into a new locale or crisis: escorting wagon trains through hostile territory, rescuing captives from outlaws or Native American war parties, hunting down killers, thwarting land-grab schemes, or surviving ambushes in remote wilderness. The core premise is simple and episodic: Fargo arrives in a dangerous situation, uses his unmatched tracking skills and quick draw to unravel mysteries or confront villains, engages in brutal shootouts and survival challenges, beds willing women along the way, and rides off alone at the end, leaving justice served (or vengeance exacted) behind him. Themes of frontier justice, rugged individualism, and the clash between civilization and savagery recur, often involving corrupt officials, ruthless gangs, greedy speculators, or warring tribes. While Fargo is essentially honorable—he protects the innocent, despises bullies, and follows a personal code—he operates outside formal law, bending or breaking rules as needed. Stories frequently feature revenge quests, rescues, treasure hunts, or battles over land/mining rights, with high body counts and escalating violence. The episodic format ensures no overarching arc beyond Fargo's eternal wandering, making any book a good entry point.

Main Characters

Skye Fargo is the sole continuing protagonist and the heart of the series. A tall, lean, broad-shouldered man in his prime, Fargo is instantly recognizable by his piercing "lake blue" eyes, which seem to see everything. An expert tracker and scout, he reads sign (tracks, broken twigs, disturbed earth) like others read books. His preferred weapons include a .44 Colt revolver (for close work) and a rifle for distance, but he's deadly with knife or fists too. Despite his attractiveness and sexual charisma—he effortlessly seduces women—he remains deliberately single, avoiding entanglements that might tie him down.

Fargo's backstory is lightly sketched: a man shaped by the wild, more at home in the wilderness than cities, with a code that values honor, protects the weak, and punishes the wicked. He's laconic, observant, and unflinching in violence, yet capable of gentleness toward innocents or animals. His only constant companion is his magnificent pinto stallion, known simply as the Ovaro (a breed noted for endurance and intelligence), which serves as loyal sidekick, transportation, and occasional lifesaver.

Supporting characters are transient: damsels in distress, corrupt sheriffs, ruthless outlaws, scheming businessmen, Native warriors (portrayed variably as foes or allies depending on the story), Army officers, or fellow drifters. No recurring ensemble exists—Fargo rides alone, forming temporary alliances or romances that end when he moves on. Villains are archetypal: sadistic gang leaders, greedy land barons, vengeful bounty hunters, or brutal raiders, providing clear antagonists for Fargo to dispatch.

Setting

The setting spans the vast, untamed American frontier of the mid-to-late 1800s, with each book transporting Fargo to a different corner of the expanding West. Stories unfold across diverse landscapes: rugged Rocky Mountains, sun-scorched deserts of the Southwest (Arizona, New Mexico), vast plains of Texas and Dakota Territory, river valleys along the Mississippi or Missouri, timbered Pacific Northwest, and high-country passes. Specific locales include mining camps, frontier towns, Army forts, wagon trails, Native American territories (often featuring Comanche, Apache, Nez Perce, or Crow conflicts), and remote wilderness areas where civilization is thin or nonexistent.

The environment is as much an antagonist as any outlaw: blizzards, flash floods, ambushes in canyons, starvation in badlands, or horse-killing treks test Fargo's endurance. Historical details—wagon trains, stagecoaches, early railroads, gold rushes, Indian Wars—ground the tales in the era's expansionist turmoil, though accuracy takes a backseat to excitement. The frontier symbolizes freedom and danger: open spaces offer escape but also isolation, where a man survives by skill, nerve, and a good horse. This vivid, unforgiving backdrop amplifies the sense of adventure and peril, making every trail a potential death trap or triumph.

Tone & Themes

The tone is hard-hitting, gritty, and unapologetically pulpy—classic "adult Western" with graphic violence, explicit sexual content, and raw frontier realism. Action is fast and visceral: gunfights, knife battles, scalping, beatings, and massacres are described in blunt detail, without romanticizing the brutality of the era. Sensual encounters are frequent and straightforward—Fargo's legendary prowess with women is a hallmark, often involving passionate, consensual trysts with saloon girls, ranchers' daughters, or female captives he rescues—adding steamy interludes between action sequences. Beneath the exploitation elements lies a straightforward moral compass: Fargo is tough but fair, a man of few words who lets his actions speak. Humor is sparse and dry, emerging from ironic situations or Fargo's laconic wit rather than slapstick. The narratives move at a relentless pace, prioritizing thrills over deep introspection, with little moral ambiguity—villains are despicable, and justice is swift and final. This makes the series feel like modern pulp successors to old dime novels or men's adventure magazines: exciting, testosterone-fueled escapism for readers seeking no-frills Western thrills with an adult edge. It's not introspective or revisionist like some later Westerns; it's proudly old-school, delivering straightforward good-vs-evil confrontations amid blood and dust.

The Trailsman series stands as a monumental achievement in pulp Western literature: nearly 400 fast-paced, action-packed novels that delivered reliable frontier thrills to generations of readers. Through Skye Fargo's endless wanderings, Jon Sharpe (and his successors) captured the raw essence of the adult Western—unflinching violence, steamy encounters, moral simplicity, and the mythic appeal of the lone hero against a savage land. While not for those seeking nuanced character studies or historical revisionism, the books excel as pure escapism: short, visceral adventures that evoke the golden age of paperback Westerns. Fargo's trail may have ended in print, but his legend endures as the ultimate Trailsman—always riding toward the next horizon, blue eyes scanning for trouble, ready to set things right with lead and grit. For fans of classic men's adventure Westerns, the series remains an addictive, no-nonsense ride through the untamed West.

FAQ

How many books are in The Trailsman series?

396 books total: 200 main + 196 companion books

When will the next book in the series be released?

No new book is currently scheduled. The latest book, Arizona Ambushers, was published in December 2014.

When was the most recent book released?

Arizona Ambushers was published in December 2014.

What was the first book in the series?

The first book in the series is The Hanging Trail, published in July 1980.

What genre is The Trailsman series?

The series primarily falls into the Historical genre.

What is The Trailsman series about?

The series follows the wandering exploits of Skye Fargo, the titular "Trailsman"—a legendary frontiersman, scout, tracker, and gunfighter who roams the American West in the mid-19th century (roughly 1850s–1870s). Fargo is a solitary drifter by choice, taking on jobs as a guide, protector, bounty hunter, or avenger whenever a trail leads him into trouble. Each standalone novel drops him into a new locale or crisis: escorting wagon trains through hostile territory, rescuing captives from outlaws or Native American war parties, hunting down killers, thwarting land-grab schemes, or surviving ambushes in remote wilderness. The core premise is simple and episodic: Fargo arrives in a dangerous situation, uses his unmatched tracking skills and quick draw to unravel mysteries or confront villains, engages in brutal shootouts and survival challenges, beds willing women along the way, and rides off alone at the end, leaving justice served (or vengeance exacted) behind him. Themes of frontier justice, rugged individualism, and the clash between civilization and savagery recur, often involving corrupt officials, ruthless gangs, greedy speculators, or warring tribes. While Fargo is essentially honorable—he protects the innocent, despises bullies, and follows a personal code—he operates outside formal law, bending or breaking rules as needed. Stories frequently feature revenge quests, rescues, treasure hunts, or battles over land/mining rights, with high body counts and escalating violence. The episodic format ensures no overarching arc beyond Fargo's eternal wandering, making any book a good entry point.

Is The Trailsman series finished?

The series does not currently have a new book scheduled.