Skip to content
Scan a barcode
Scan

Mark Harmon

Follow to get improved recommendations.

Author Bio

History with a pulse, faith with a calendar

Mark Harmon’s name turns up on books that don’t settle into one lane. Some lean into investigative history, where the cast includes spies, agents, and institutions under pressure. Others move in a quieter register: devotional reading measured in days, meant to be lived with rather than finished in a rush. Taken together, Mark Harmon books suggest a writer drawn to the moment when private lives collide with public events. If you’ve wondered how many books he has written, the range points to more than a single format.

When the title reads like a case file

In Ghosts of Honolulu, the title frames history as a pursuit: someone watching, someone hunting, and a catastrophic event whose “untold story” hints at overlooked angles. The phrasing favors specificity, a Japanese spy and a Japanese American spy hunter, built from close observation and the friction of identity when suspicion becomes policy, with parallel tracks converging on Pearl Harbor.

Ghosts of Panama reads like a dossier summary: a strongman, a killing, agents pinned between orders and consequences. The momentum is escalation, “out of control,” then “murdered,” then “invasion,” a ground-level view where institutions show up as pressure. The word “ghosts” suggests the parts that won’t stay buried, the way a country’s decisions echo through individual lives.

A different tempo

Not every Mark Harmon book is built like an investigation. The Warmed Heart: 30 Days in the Company of John Wesley signals a shift in posture. The unit of measure is the day, not the chapter; the goal is company, not conquest. The 30-day framework suggests a guided practice you return to in small portions. If the “Ghosts” books promise momentum, The Warmed Heart promises rhythm.

Other turns in the bibliography

What these books tend to offer a reader

The work returns to moments when the stakes are public and the consequences intimate, and it’s comfortable with frameworks: the case-file subtitle, the 30-day structure, the series installment that promises continuity. Choose your entry point by appetite. For the forward pull of real-world conflict, the “Ghosts” books are built to be followed. For a steadier companion, The Warmed Heart is a book you inhabit rather than binge. The name attaches to more than one mode of reading: narrative investigation, spiritual practice, and titles that hint at resilience. If you’re looking to buy Mark Harmon books, you can find great low-cost copies on ThriftBooks.

Copyright © 2026 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks ® and the ThriftBooks ® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured