Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Revenge (Jason Bourne Book 22) cover

Robert Ludlum's The Bourne Revenge (Jason Bourne Book 22)

Jason Bourne • Book 22

4.47 Goodreads
(671 ratings)

Why You'll Love This

Jason Bourne's lost memory holds the only clue to a Chinese spy's identity — and someone made sure he'd never remember it.

  • Great if you want: spy thriller with amnesia, layered conspiracies, and a ticking clock
  • The experience: fast-moving and tightly plotted — chapters end on sharp, propulsive hooks
  • The writing: Freeman structures reveals with precision, parceling out memory and truth carefully
  • Skip if: you're new to the series — back-history adds significant weight here

About This Book

Jason Bourne has always been defined by what he can't remember — but in The Bourne Revenge, that missing past becomes the key to a threat with consequences far beyond one man's fractured identity. When evidence surfaces of deep-cover Chinese espionage operating across the U.S., the only person who may have encountered the spy known as Bai Ze is Bourne himself — eight years ago, during an operation he can no longer recall. Then he crosses paths with a journalist carrying the same inexplicable void in her memory, and the hunt for a ghost becomes something far more personal and far more dangerous.

Brian Freeman has spent several entries in this series sharpening his grip on the franchise, and The Bourne Revenge shows that craft at its most confident. The pacing moves like a controlled detonation — tight chapters, clean scene cuts, and a dual-mystery structure that gives the thriller both momentum and texture. Freeman balances tradecraft and character with genuine skill, letting Bourne's psychological wounds drive the tension as much as any action sequence does. It's lean, propulsive storytelling that respects the reader's intelligence.