Is Strangers in Flight for you?

The Sons of the Starfarers series is a character-focused science fiction saga about exile, loyalty, and survival on the edges of interstellar war. Strangers in Flight (Sons of the Starfarers: Book 3) is a military science fiction adventure story about survival on the run—when one wrong jump can put you back in the hands of people who own the corridors. It delivers starship tension, cultural collision, and the slow, earned shift from “I’m alone” to “we’re in this together”—when survival starts depending on someone else.

What Kind of Reader Will Love Strangers in Flight?

If you love…

  • space opera / military-flavored SF where the danger feels immediate and personal (pirates, patrols, docking bays, and narrow escapes)
  • character-driven adventure about loyalty, grief, and the determination to keep going when everything gets taken from you
  • fish-out-of-water culture shock with real emotional weight (language barriers, customs clashes, trying to belong in a world that isn’t yours)
  • unlikely partners / found connection—two strangers forced to trust each other under pressure
  • resourceful protagonists who solve problems under confinement and constant surveillance

…then Strangers in Flight is probably your kind of story.

What You’ll Find Inside

This book follows Isaac—an outworld starfarer trying to stay alive and get free—and Reva, the once-mysterious “henna girl,” now awake and thrust into a hostile culture where even basic norms (language, clothing, privacy) don’t match her own. The mood is tense and kinetic, with a constant undercurrent of grief, disorientation, and stubborn hope. The style leans fast-paced and adventure-forward, with close-up emotional stakes and the feeling that every safe place is temporary.

What Makes Strangers in Flight Different

Instead of drawing out its central mystery across the entire series, Strangers in Flight brings a long-teased character fully into the story and allows her to actively shape its direction. It’s here where Reva (the mysterious cryosleep survivor from the first book) becomes a full character whose choices reshape the direction of the story. The book also leans hard into culture as conflict—not just politics and lasers, but the intimate friction of norms, taboos, and translation (and what it costs to adapt without losing yourself). And at its core, it’s about two people helping each other endure different kinds of captivity—external and internal—until they aren’t strangers anymore.

What You Won’t Find

You won’t find a slow, meditative “slice-of-life in space” book here—this one is built to keep the overarching series moving and to keep the tension tight. Also: while the story includes a culture with different norms around privacy and modesty, and moments of uncomfortable attention from antagonistic men, it treats the situation as a real complication and source of vulnerability rather than as eroticized content.

Why I Think You Might Love It

When I hit Book 3, this story stopped feeling like “the next installment” and started feeling like the bridge that revealed how the series could become what it wanted to be. I didn’t want Reva’s mystery to dominate everything, so I made a choice that changed the whole series: I brought her fully onstage, let her become real, and let the plot grow out of who she is—sharp, resourceful, and carrying a kind of loss that’s harder to outrun than any ship. And in a strange way, that’s what I hope lands for you as a reader: the idea that sometimes the best way to survive your own crisis is to help someone else survive theirs—until “strangers” quietly becomes “we.”

Where to Get the Book

Related Posts and Pages

Explore the Sons of the Starfarers series index.

Return to the book page for Strangers in Flight.