Ben Coes

Ben Coes grew up in West Simsbury, Connecticut, with a curiosity for both the mechanics of power and the pulse of the world beyond his hometown. That curiosity carried him to Columbia College in New York City, where he honed his storytelling, earning the Bennett Cerf Memorial Prize for Fiction. Yet Coes’ path to the page was far from linear. Early roles as a White House intern and a speechwriter for the U.S. Secretary of Energy during the Gulf War offered him an insider’s perspective on political strategy and the shadowed corners of international affairs, experiences that would later shape the tension and authenticity of his novels.
When Coes published his debut thriller, Power Down, he introduced Dewey Andreas, a former Delta Force operative drawn into the web of modern espionage. From there, the series expanded with titles like Coup d’État, The Last Refuge, and Trap the Devil, each weaving high-stakes action with the psychological and ethical complexities of global conflict. Coes’ narratives are marked by precise, realistic portrayals of intelligence operations, relentless pacing, and the kind of moral ambiguity that keeps readers questioning who is truly in control.