New Additions to the Vasicek Free Library!

Every month, I try to rotate a couple of titles in and out of the Vasicek Free Library. This month, I’m republishing my old short story “Prison of Dreams,” and setting my novella In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight to free. Check them out!

Prison of Dreams: A Short Story

Prison of Dreams: A Short Story

A boy, a girl, and a starship gone mad.

As the colony mission's historian, Hazel thought the voyage would be as uneventful for her as going to sleep and waking up on the new, alien world. She was wrong.

It's unclear whether the ship's AI is crazy or merely lonely, but for whatever reason, it is convinced that it needs to feed on her dreams. But the colony mission is still centuries from arrival, and Hazel will live out her natural life and die alone if she cannot convince the ship to put her back into cryosleep.

There are alternatives, however. If the ship manages to awaken the right person for her, none of them ever have to be lonely again.

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About the Book
A boy, a girl, and a starship gone mad. As the colony mission’s historian, Hazel thought the voyage would be as uneventful for her as going to sleep and waking up on the new, alien world. She was wrong. It’s unclear whether the ship’s AI is crazy or merely lonely, but for whatever reason, it is convinced that it needs to feed on her dreams. But the colony mission is still centuries from arrival, and Hazel will live out her natural life and die alone if she cannot convince the ship to put her back into cryosleep. There are alternatives, however. If the ship manages to awaken the right person for her, none of them ever have to be lonely again.
Details
Author: Joe Vasicek
Series: Short Story Singles
Genres: Action & Adventure, FICTION, Romance, Science Fiction, Science Fiction, Short Stories (single author), Space Exploration, Space Opera
Tag: 2026 Release
Publisher: Joe Vasicek
Publication Year: June 2026
Length: Short Story
Narrator: Auto-narrated
eBook Price: free!
Audiobook Price: free!
Joe Vasicek

Joe Vasicek fell in love with science fiction and fantasy when he read The Neverending Story as a child. He is the author of more than twenty books, including Genesis Earth, Gunslinger to the Stars, The Sword Keeper, and the Sons of the Starfarers series. As a young man, he studied Arabic at Brigham Young University and traveled across the Middle East and the Caucasus Mountains. He lives in Utah with his wife and two apple trees.

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Some of the links in the page above are "affiliate links." This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. You will not receive any additional charge. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight

In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight

Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil!

When Captain Victor Andrecek and his crew of down-and-out smugglers respond to a deep space distress call, what they find shocks them to their very core. The victim is dead, his EVA suit nailed to a cross and launched on the head of a repurposed missile, with the words of an ancient scripture burned on a plaque at his feet. And he is not the only one.

The madman behind the murders is a privateer known as Zedekiah Wight, and the reward on his head is more than enough to tempt Andrecek and his struggling crew. With it, they can finally get back on their feet again—not to mention, rid the galaxy of a very dangerous man.

But Andrecek can't help but wonder: what was Zedekiah's reason for crucifying those men? With the showdown rapidly approaching, the answer might make the difference between being in the right, or being dead.

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About the Book
Details
Authors: Joe Vasicek, J.M. Wight
Series: Zedekiah Wight, Book 1
Genres: Action & Adventure, Christian, Crime & Mystery, FICTION, Futuristic, General, Military, Science Fiction, Space Exploration, Space Opera
Tag: 2022 Release
Publisher: Joe Vasicek
Publication Year: January 2022
Length: Novella
ASIN: B09Q52BK88
eBook Price: $2.99
Audiobook Price: $4.99 Sale!
Joe Vasicek

Joe Vasicek fell in love with science fiction and fantasy when he read The Neverending Story as a child. He is the author of more than twenty books, including Genesis Earth, Gunslinger to the Stars, The Sword Keeper, and the Sons of the Starfarers series. As a young man, he studied Arabic at Brigham Young University and traveled across the Middle East and the Caucasus Mountains. He lives in Utah with his wife and two apple trees.

Some of the links in the page above are "affiliate links." This means if you click on the link and purchase the item, I will receive an affiliate commission. You will not receive any additional charge. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Is In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight for you?

Is In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight for you?

In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight is a dark, morally charged space opera about smugglers, pirates, crime families, slavery, scripture, and the terrible cost of justice in a corrupt galaxy. It delivers a tense, fast-moving science fiction adventure with the hard edges of military SF, the moral intensity of religious fiction, and the larger-than-life presence of a vigilante privateer who may be a madman—or exactly the kind of man the galaxy needs.

What Kind of Reader Will Love This Book?

If you love…

  • Space opera with smugglers, pirate hunters, frontier systems, crime syndicates, and corrupt interstellar powers
  • Military science fiction where battle tactics, starships, boarding actions, and hard choices drive the plot
  • Morally serious science fiction about justice, conscience, slavery, tyranny, and redemption
  • Religious science fiction that draws from scripture, especially Isaiah, without turning into a sermon
  • Antiheroic vigilante figures in the tradition of Solomon Kane, but reimagined for a far-future galactic setting

…then In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight is probably your kind of story.

What You’ll Find Inside

In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight follows Captain Victor Andrecek, an ex-rebel commodore turned smuggler, as a suspicious distress signal pulls his small freighter crew into the path of Zedekiah Wight, a feared privateer whose brutal crusade has made him enemies among pirates, crime lords, slavers, and empires alike. Along the way, the story explores moral compromise, righteous judgment, human trafficking, rebellion, loyalty, and the difference between revenge and justice. The result is a tense, violent, scripture-haunted space opera that feels both pulpy and prophetic: a fast-paced adventure about what happens when ordinary sinners are forced to choose sides in a galaxy where evil has become respectable.

What Makes It Different

Fans of Robert E. Howard’s Solomon Kane will recognize the appeal of a grim, uncompromising wanderer who brings judgment to evildoers, but In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight takes that archetype into a far-future space opera setting of jump-hubs, smugglers, superintelligences, battle armor, crime families, and galactic power politics. Where many vigilante stories focus on lone-wolf revenge, this story leans into conscience, command, loyalty, and the terrifying question of whether justice can remain just when the world itself has gone mad.

It also stands apart from mainstream space opera by treating religious imagery and scripture as central to the story’s moral atmosphere rather than as exotic window dressing. The Isaiah references, the biblical cadence, and the question of who Zedekiah Wight really is give the story a distinctive identity: part military SF thriller, part anti-slavery crusade, part religious science fiction, and part dark frontier adventure.

What You Won’t Find

If you’re looking for lighthearted space adventure, cozy science fiction, secular-only space opera, or a clean-cut hero who never gets blood on his hands, this probably isn’t that kind of book. The story includes brutal violence, disturbing criminal evil, and morally uncomfortable questions about justice, vengeance, and complicity.

But if you want a dark yet purposeful science fiction story where evil is treated as evil, where conscience still matters, and where redemption is possible even for characters who have compromised themselves, you’ll feel right at home.

Why I Think You Might Love It

I wrote Zedekiah Wight because there comes a point when the lies, hypocrisy, corruption, and gaslighting become too much to bear, and you either take a stand or go quietly insane. This story grew out of my love for science fiction, my fascination with scripture—especially Isaiah—and my desire to create a character who feels less like a conventional protagonist and more like a force of nature. Zedekiah’s methods are brutal, and readers may argue over whether he is righteous, mad, or both, but that tension is exactly what makes the story matter to me: in a galaxy where powerful people profit from evil while calling it good, what kind of man would it take to refuse the lie completely?

Where to Get the Book

Related Posts and Pages

Explore my other standalone books here.

Return to the book page for In the Wake of Zedekiah Wight.

In response to “A Crippling Realization”

I got a lot of feedback on my last blog post, and rather than respond to it one at a time, I thought it would be better to just write another blog post and respond to it here.

First of all, thanks for all of the support. I really appreciate it. I’m not going through a particularly hard time right now, and I’m not thinking seriously about giving up writing either, so I’m sorry if my last post gave that impression. I’m definitely going to keep writing, since this is the path that I feel I’ve been called to, and the vocation that I should pursue.

This isn’t a question of “should I give up writing, or should I sell out to the woke agenda?” Rather, it’s a question of “should I go off and become a voice in the wilderness, or should I focus on building my career?” It may be possible to do both things at once, but when I look at where the culture is today, it looks more and more like a very difficult needle to thread.

Or maybe not. Maybe what we call “the culture” is mostly just a bunch of bullies, sock puppets, and trolls conspiring with Big Tech and the corporate media to drown out all other voices. Perhaps the true culture has actually bifurcated, and what looks like “the wilderness” is actually where the most people really are. Perhaps it really is just a small number of people going crazy, and because of all the gaslighting, everyone else only thinks that they are the last sane man or woman in this world.

The other thing I ought to keep in mind is that crying out against our modern culture isn’t actually removing yourself from the cultural conversation. On the contrary, it’s one of the most outspoken ways to be a part of it, even if you do end up in the wilderness. Hardly anything from the culture of the Old Testament has survived, but we still have the words of their prophets today.

It is frustrating, though, because the culture really isn’t producing any of the kinds of stories that made me fall in love with science fiction and fantasy in the first place. Brandon Sanderson is kind of an exception to that, but in some ways even he seems to be bending before the cultural winds. Do I need to bend as well? There may be some wisdom in that: after all, the grass can endure the storm that takes down the mighty oak.

So you see, it’s a much more nuanced question than “do I bend the knee or give up writing?” Rather, it’s a question of where to bend, and where to stand firm. I doubt my Zedekiah Wight stuff is going to amass much of a following, though I’d love to be proven wrong. But I’ve still got to find ways to stay true to my inner voice, even if that drives me out into the cultural wilderness.

Anyways, these are just some of the questions I’ve been pondering lately. I’m not depressed, and I’m not going to give up writing, so don’t worry about that, though thanks for your concern.

A Crippling Realization

I have come to realize something that is, in some ways, making it very difficult for me to keep writing. Not in the short or the medium term—I’m actually making quite good progress on my current novel WIP, and am optimistic about finishing my three unfinished trilogies in the next couple of years. But when I look on the horizon, this thing that I’ve come to realize is looming like a storm cloud, and I worry that if something doesn’t change, and change soon, that storm is going to wipe me out.

When Orson Scott Card spoke at the BYU Library in 2007, he made a profound statement that had a great influence on my writing, and my decision to write. He said that stories and fiction are how the culture talks to itself. In other words, if you want to understand a particular culture, look at the stories that it produces.

The problem is that unfortunately, I have come to despise almost everything about our current culture.

I hate all the hypocrisy and virtue signalling that we see online. I hate how that virtue signalling has poisoned almost every major franchise, from Star Wars and Marvel to the commercials and advertisements that we consume on a daily basis. I hate how the virtue signalling of our gatekeepers has allowed our cultural vandals to erase our history and destroy our cultural icons.

I hate how our education system has become corrupted. I hate how it has been transformed into an indoctrination system that brainwashes everyone who goes through it, producing nothing but legions of woke fanatical footsoldiers and hordes of incompetent midwits. I hate how it holds our children hostage for the benefit of the unions, and how it utterly exterminates our children’s natural creativity and curiosity in order to turn them into nothing but cogs in society’s grand machine.

Above all else, I hate and hold in utter contempt how our culture has become anti-life, and promotes the unrestricted wholesale slaughter of our unborn children as a moral good. I hate how this rejection of the value of life has trickled down into every facet of our society, poisoning how we see each other and how we treat our fellow men. I sincerely believe that our ongoing genocide of the unborn exceeds the evil of the Nazi holocaust in every moral and ethical dimension. I also hope that future generations have the moral clarity to hold us in greater contempt than the Nazis, and plan to do everything within my power to make that a reality.

I hate the sexual revolution, and how it eviscerated the traditional family while also producing the most prudish and sex-negative society that this nation has ever seen. I hate how our sexually “liberated” culture celebrates our worst perversions and teaches us to define ourselves by our basest urges, instead of urging us to strive for something higher and better. I despise the transgender movement that is butchering our children and annihilating their innocence, all for the carnal gratification of the worst sexual predators among us.

I hate how our culture rejects the things of God. I hate how that even most self-described Christians have never read the Bible cover to cover. I hate how our churches are led by moral cowards who fear to offend their followers more than they fear to offend the Almighty. I hate how many of our priests and pastors have come to serve Mammon more than they serve God.

I hate almost every book and story that has won a major literary award within my lifetime. When I survey the field of science fiction and fantasy, I see hordes of talented writers willfully prostituting themselves to the spirit of the age, and pleasuring the whore of Babylon for the praise and glory of the world. When I read the books that our culture holds up as the greatest contemporary works, I am disgusted by the sexual depravity and nihilistic materialism that pervades them. Aside from Brandon Sanderson and a few obscure authors whose works the culture is actively working to suppress, I find nothing redeemable or even genuinely thought-provoking in any of these contemptible works.

Most of my readers are over the age of 55, probably because of just how much I hold our contemporary culture in such contempt. And yet, I cannot help but despise the Boomers for robbing me of my birthright and leaving me buried in a mountain of debts that neither I, nor my children, nor my grandchildren will ever be able to repay. Every generation before the Baby Boomers aspired to give their children lives that were better than their own, but the Boomers squandered everything that the previous generations gave them, and left their children sicker, poorer, and more unloved. In fact, the Boomers cared so little for their children that they locked down the entire country, deprived them of the crucial years of their education, and forcefully injected them with an experimental jab, all out of fear that the virus would shave off a few of their rapidly waning years. The Boomers are the ones who gave us our totally dysfunctional education system, Roe v. Wade, the sexual revolution, and the genocide of the unborn. They are the ones who pushed God and religion out of public life, and corrupted our churches to the point where they would not recognize the Lord if He came down and preached a sermon to them Himself. If our country falls into a second civil war, it will be because of the Boomers more than any other generation.

And now we hear of wars and rumors of war in the east, and people tell me that we are closer to nuclear annihilation than at any other point in my lifetime. And yet, when I look at how corrupt and utterly depraved our society has become, I cannot help but wonder if that would be such a bad thing. We read that the sword of the wrath of the Almighty is bathed in heaven, and that the angels are pleading with the Lord to let it fall, so that it will purge our iniquity from the face of this Earth. Sometimes, I find myself raising my voice with the same plea.

I recognize that “the culture” is not monolithic, and that there are many people who hold similar opinions and think and feel the same way that I do. And I hope you don’t take the wrong idea from this rant: I’m not about to throw my life away, or do something terrible. I have a loving wife and family, and friends in my life who are genuinely good people. It’s funny how that even as things seem to get worse and worse as far as the country is concerned, the people immediately around me don’t seem nearly as bad, and my own personal life actually seems to be getting better.

But as a writer, it’s my duty and responsibility to be a part of the wider cultural conversation, in order to write stories that resonate properly with my readers. To do that, I need to keep my finger on the pulse of a culture that I have come to hold in utter contempt.

How long can this situation stand? Either the culture needs to change, or I need to change something about what I’m doing, which means that I should probably change myself. Should I change my view of the culture, or should I channel that contempt into my writing somehow?

One of the reasons I started writing the Zedekiah Wight stories under my J.M. Wight pen name is to help maintain my sanity in the face of this dilemma. I just finished writing a short story where Zedekiah basically instigates the nuclear annihilation of the galaxy, because of the reasons I outlined above. I was planning to release that story in April, but I may move it up a couple of months. Zedekiah Wight is the character who fascinates me the most right now, even though almost half of my writing group despises him. Is he a madman, or is he the last sane man in a galaxy that has gone absolutely insane? I honestly do not know.

And what about me? Is my utter contempt of the culture a sign that I’ve gone crazy, or that the world has gone crazy all around me? And what does that mean for my writing?