A spy novel series by Alex Berenson. The series is led by John Wells, a legendary CIA hero. So far[when?] there are six books available, with at least two more books on the way.

Tropes used in John Wells include:
  • Badass: Seriously, you need to ask?
  • Because I'm Good At It: Wells has come to realize that, no matter how hard he tries, he'll never quit spy.
  • Blood Knight: Wells relish in whites-in-the-eyes fight...because it's the only time he feels alive.
  • The Chessmaster: Khadri in Faithful Spy, Li in Ghost War, Nasiji in Silent Man, Duto in Midnight House, Saeed in Secret Soldier, Lautner in Shadow Patrol.
  • Cloudcuckoolander: Shafer acts this way, though he is unquestionably the best analyst in CIA. Whether he's that weird or he wants to mythify himself is beyond everyone.
  • Cold Sniper: Francesca.
  • Complete Monster: Averted until Shadow Patrol. Francesca doesn't have any sort of justification for smuggling drugs and sniping fellow servicemen. He does it because he can. His dying words are "Why not? Why not, why not, why not."
  • Contrived Coincidence: In Shadow Patrol, it just happens that Talib warlord Amadullah Thuwani's half-brother is Miteb, a Saudi prince whom Wells worked for in Secret Soldier. But better that than Ass Pull character.
  • Cowboy Cop: More like cowboy agent. Wells is more used to work alone by his rules.
  • Da Chief: Duto hates Wells because Wells stands up to him, though he still recognizes Wells' importance.
  • Daddy Had a Good Reason For Abandoning You: Wells left his son, Evan, from his first marriage because he's going undercover to Al Qaeda.
    • Deconstructed heavily in Shadow Patrol. For Evan, Wells is as good as a sperm donor. He has considered his stepfather, Howard, as his real father.

Evan: I have two real parents. I couldn’t miss you any less.

  • Darker and Edgier: Compared to other spy fictions, this series is really dark, not because of its violence scenes, but rather its characters' depth.
    • Midnight House and Shadow Patrol are especially dark.
  • Deadpan Snarker: Everyone has his moments. Yes, truly.
  • The Determinator: Wells. Most notably in Faithful Spy, where he's infected with plague, and in the Ghost War, where he's tortured in Chinese prison.
  • Downer Ending: The end of Midnight House. Wells has been made a fool by Vinny Duto so badly that he quits CIA.
  • The Dragon: Yusuf to Nasiji, Francesca to Lautner.
  • Driven to Suicide: Rachel Callar. The moment she saw what Mohammed Fariz had done and become because of the Midnight House, she breaks.
  • Driving Question: What happened in the Midnight House? And who is Stan in Shadow Patrol?
  • Earn Your Happy Ending: The Faithful Spy runs on this trope. For ten years, Wells lives undercover in the backwater of Afghanistan. When he returns to America, his mother was dead, his wife remarried, and his son doesn't know him. He couldn't adjust, his faith in Islam wears off, and his closest confidant Exley is trapped by her job. Even worse, neither CIA, who suspects him a traitor, nor Al Qaeda, who suspects him an infidel, trusts him. And then he gets infected with plague...But in the end, everything's worth it for Wells, for when he opens his eyes, there she is.
  • Enhanced Interrogation Techniques: The Midnight House.
  • Ensemble Darkhorse: Shafer and Duto.
  • Evil Laugh: Or more exactly, a high-pitched hyena-like giggle. Francesca's.
  • Face Heel Turn: Duto-led CIA suspects Wells of this in Faithful Spy.
    • Lautner in Shadow Patrol.
  • Foreshadowing: in Midnight House, Shafer jokes that Eddie, the mole in Ghost War and a CIA fugitive will betray himself by sending a postcard to his wife. Exactly what happens in Secret Soldier.
  • The Greatest Story Never Told: save for Times Square in Faithful Spy, the rest of Wells' adventure remains secret.
    • Most notably in Faithful Spy. Bin Laden asks Wells whether Hoover Dam is a great symbol of America. Wells says no. Nobody, not even Wells, knows how much credit he deserves for the fact that Hoover Dam is still in one piece.
    • This bites Wells in the ass in Midnight House. Fred Whitby threatens to reveal Wells' murders in Moscow in order to stop Wells' private investigation. When Wells fires back by taking credit for saving Washington DC from nuclear weapon in Silent Man, Whitby says Wells cannot reveal it without creating national hysteria.
  • He Who Fights Monsters: The only thing Wells dreads.
    • Francesca in Shadow Patrol has become one.
  • Hero of Another Story:
    • Once upon a time, Shafer saved Rosette from Mobutu, dictator of Zaire. Wells can't imagine Shafer beyond Washington suburb.
    • Duto, too. He was once a case officer in Colombia, where he'd been abducted by leftist rebels.
  • Hidden Depths:
    • Kowalski. He is an amoral man who profits from dealing weapons to all sides in a war, but as shown in Silent Man and Secret Soldier, he does the right thing sometimes. In Silent Man, he give Wells a name of a terrorist nuclear network because he can't stand seeing cities like NYC gone for some religious tales. In Secret Soldier, he connects Wells with Abdullah, a moderate king of Saudi Arabia whom he regards better than the rest of the royals.
    • Duto. True, he's a full-blown Jerkass Da Chief, Obstructive Bureaucrat borderline corrupt, and most of all, an egoistic power-seeker who refuses to take blame for any mistake CIA makes. But the Batman Gambit he pulls off on Wells and Shafer in Midnight House exemplifies why it's not wise to cross on this man. Also, in Shadow Patrol, it's revealed that Duto had once suffered a two-month abduction in Colombia, shrugged it off in two weeks of Caribbean vacation, and then returned to the same station. Nobody had ever accused him of being afraid.
  • Hiding Behind Religion: What Wells thinks of Al Qaeda.
  • Idiot Ball: Hardly anyone in the series. Most of the characters are sensible and third-dimensional.
  • Internal Affairs: Shadow Patrol's plot. Who's the traitor in CIA Kabul station?
  • Interservice Rivalry: CIA versus Office of Director of National Intelligence in Midnight House. CIA wins.
  • Iron Woobie: Wells. When you consider how he sacrifices his first wife, his son, and his girlfriend to save his country, you can't help but sympathize him.
  • It Gets Easier: played with. Wells has no compunction killing terrorists, but he is no assassin. He never forgets anyone he kills, and he can't pretend all of them are his enemies.
  • It Seemed Like a Good Idea At the Time: Wells duct-tapes Kowalski's head in Ghost War. For that, Kowalski tries to assassinate him and Exley in Silent Man, the next book. Disproportionate Retribution can't even begin to describe Kowalski's attempt to get even.
  • Jerkass Woobie: David Miller. He's a drug dealer, yes, but given the way Stan and Amadullah treat him, it's hard to not feel any sympathy for him.
  • Jurisdiction Friction: again, Midnight House, CIA versus ODNI. CIA wants the truth of Midnight House comes out and ODNI doesn't.
  • Karma Houdini: Kowalski and Saeed.
  • Knight in Sour Armor: Wells.
  • Long Game:
    • Khadri's plan in Faithful Spy. by car bombing Los Angeles and assassinating an ex-Pentagon top dog, he attempts to occupy CIA as long as he can until he can launch his two-pronged master plan: dirty-bombing Times Square and then plague-spreading New York subways.
    • Lautner's plan in Shadow Patrol. by dealing drugs with Talib warlord, he attempts to build his cred high enough so the Talib warlord agrees to have a private meeting with him, where he gives the warlord SAM to shoot down CIA plane.
  • Love Makes You Evil: Steve Callar.
  • MacGuffin: The truth behind the Midnight House.
  • Mad Lib Thriller Title:
    • The Faithful Spy
    • The Ghost War
    • The Silent Man
    • The Midnight House
    • The Secret Soldier
    • The Shadow Patrol
  • Magnificent Bastard: Duto, Khadri, and Li.
  • Married to the Job: Wells. His first marriage and his engagement with Exley end because of this.
  • Marty Stu: In an interview, Berenson admits Wells has traits of this. Men fear him, women love him...but at the same time, Wells is a very tortured person. He has issues with his faith, his relationship, and his addiction to spy. In Berenson's words, he'd like to know Wells, but he doesn't want to be Wells.
  • Memetic Badass: In-universe, in the aftermath of Faithful Spy. Though realistically, by fourth book it fades away. By sixth book, nobody recalls Wells on the top of his head.
  • The Mole: a subplot in Ghost War, a major plot in Shadow Patrol.
  • Nakama: Wells, Exley, and Shafer. Duto even lampshades this, calling them the Three Musketeers with us-against-the-world thing. Exley's out by the end of Silent Man, Wells quits CIA by the end of Midnight House.
  • The New Russia: a chapter in Silent Man. Wells despises it so much that, if the choices are between nightclubs of Moscow or piss-poor mountains of Afghanistan, he'll return to Afghanistan.
  • Nice Job Breaking It, Hero: by killing government-affiliated mercenaries in Russia, Wells makes it impossible for the CIA to investigate the attack on him and Exley.
  • Not So Different: Francesca screams this to Wells as they are fighting. But Wells knows better.

Francesca: You think you're any different than me, John? That what you think?
Yeah, somewhere on the way, you stopped caring who you killed.

  • Lawyer-Friendly Cameo: Averted in the Secret Soldier. Abdullah, the king of Saudi Arabia, appears as himself and serves as a major character.
  • Obstructive Bureaucrat: Fred Whitby in Midnight House.
  • One-Scene Wonder: Jordan Weiging in Ghost War, Grigory Farzadov in Silent Man, Hassan in Secret Soldier, Yergin in Shadow Patrol.
  • Only Sane Man: Shafer.
  • Osama Bin Laden: Wells met him. Twice. The only CIA agent ever does so.
  • Platonic Life Partners: Exley and Shafer. Though at Midnight House, Wells suspects something deeper. Shafer privately confirms it in Shadow Patrol.
  • Power Trio:
  • Replacement Love Interest: Anne, after Exley leaves Wells at the end of Silent Man.
  • Roaring Rampage of Revenge:
    • Wells, when Kowalski tries to assassinate him and his girlfriend in Silent Man.
    • Steve Callar in Midnight House.
  • Romance Ensues: Wells and Exley at their DC trip in Faithful Spy.
  • Said Bookism: Averted with a vengeance. Berenson's such a good author that his dialogue speaks all it needs to speak.
  • Saudi Arabia: the setting of Secret Soldier.
  • Screw the Rules, I'm Doing What's Right:
    • Li wants to save China by ignoring all sensible diplomacy with the United States.
    • Wells goes to Moscow to hunt those behind the attempt on him and Exley. He is convinced that Kremlin won't surrender them and CIA won't pursue further. He fails.
  • Seasonal Rot: Very subtle, but there. Wells and Exley become more cliche and two-dimensional after Faithful Spy. Thankfully, Berenson recovers by Midnight House.
  • Shell-Shocked Veteran: Poor Wells.
  • Shown Their Work
  • Spanner in the Works:
    • Cao in Ghost War.
    • Bashir in Silent Man. But he failed.
    • Mohammed Fariz in the Midnight House.
  • Start of Darkness: Lautner's wife and brother were killed by Al Qaeda triple agent. CIA, specially Duto, refused to own that up. That prompts Lautner into his Face Heel Turn.
  • State Sec: Chinese MSS in Ghost War, Egyptian mukhabarat and Pakistani ISI in Midnight House, Saudi muk in Secret Soldier.
  • The Stoic: Wells.
  • Torture Always Works: Deconstructed heavily in Midnight House. It works, but at what cost?
  • Torture Cellar: the eponymous Midnight House.
  • True Neutral: Kowalski.
  • Ultimate Job Security: Zig-zagged. After the Faithful Spy, Duto rewards Wells and Exley and Shafer his CIA director-level credentials, but puts them outside official chain-of-command of Langley. This means that our trio have blank check on whatever work they do, but one mistake and they are fired.
  • Antagonist Title: The Shadow Patrol. It refers to a sniper duet that goes rogue in Afghanistan, Wells' ultimate enemy in the eponymous book.
  • War On Terror
  • Well-Intentioned Extremist: Li wants to purge corrupt ministers in Chinese leadership so Chinese nation can achieve greater prosperity. Only one problem: he does so by pushing China to war with America
  • What Exactly Is His Job?: In a pleasant twist, Wells asks this to himself. After the Faithful Spy, there isn't much he could do in CIA. Sure, he saves America once every year so far, but he doesn't have a daily job.
  • What the Hell, Hero?: Wells gets so many in Silent Man. From Rosette, Shafer, Duto, Kowalski, and Exley.
  • World Half Full: Wells has issues with his faith, relationship, and politics. And yet he still trusts that what he's doing is right.