Is Queen of the Falconstar for You?

Queen of the Falconstar is a character-driven space opera about captivity, survival, ambition, and the dangerous opportunities that can open when your old life is stripped away. If you like science fiction that combines starships and interstellar raiders with sharp psychological conflict, high-stakes power struggles, and a heroine who refuses to stay powerless, this book may be for you.

What Kind of Reader Will Love This Book?

If you love…

  • space opera with frontier-colony danger, raiders, and starfaring clan politics
  • character-driven science fiction about survival, adaptation, and rising through a hostile system
  • intelligent, pragmatic heroines who think their way through impossible situations
  • morally complicated stories where safety, loyalty, love, and ambition collide
  • tense emotional dynamics involving captivity, power imbalance, and hard choices

…then Queen of the Falconstar is probably your kind of story.

What You’ll Find Inside

At the center of the story is Zlata, a restless young woman trapped in a dead-end life on an isolated mining station, who is suddenly carried away captive when raiders attack her home. What follows is a tense emotional journey through fear, culture shock, survival, and ruthless self-reinvention, as she realizes that if she wants any future at all, she will have to make herself indispensable. The tone is intense, intimate, and often morally thorny, with a style that is fast-moving, psychologically focused, and grounded more in strategy, character tension, and social maneuvering than in large-scale battlefield spectacle.

What Makes It Different

Fans of space opera will recognize the appeal of starships, frontier colonies, and interstellar conflict, but Queen of the Falconstar takes those elements in a more intimate and socially dangerous direction. Where many science fiction adventure stories focus on external missions or military campaigns, this one leans into captivity, hierarchy, cultural assimilation, and the question of how much of yourself you can surrender without losing your soul. It also stands apart through Zlata herself: she is not a conventional idealist or rebel, but a pragmatic realist whose strength comes from clear-eyed adaptation. The result is a space opera that feels personal, volatile, and psychologically charged.

What You Won’t Find

You won’t find a lighthearted or clean-edged adventure here. This book deals with slavery, sexual threat, coercive power structures, and polygamy-adjacent marriage politics, though it aims to handle those elements seriously rather than gratuitously. You also won’t find a simple good-versus-evil story, since much of the tension comes from navigating a brutal world where survival often depends on morally compromised choices.

Why I Think You Might Love It

This story mattered to me because I could never quite let it go. Zlata especially stayed with me: she’s crafty, pragmatic, resourceful, slightly pessimistic, and ruthless when she needs to be, but she’s also trying to face reality as it is and survive it on purpose. I think this book will connect most strongly with readers who are drawn to stories about what a person becomes under pressure, and about the strange, dangerous line between being conquered and choosing to rise.

Where to Get the Book

Related Posts and Pages

Explore the series index for the Falconstar Trilogy.

Return to the book page for Queen of the Falconstar.

Moral Courage in Gunslinger to the Stars

What does it mean to do the right thing when the galaxy around you is chaotic, corrupt, or outright absurd? Gunslinger to the Stars takes that question and drops it squarely in the lap of Sam Kletchka—a mercenary gunslinger navigating a dangerous galactic frontier who keeps choosing responsibility even when no one is watching, rewarding, or deserving. At its heart, this space-western adventure is about moral courage: the stubborn, unfashionable insistence on doing the right thing in a universe that rarely makes it easy.

Where the Idea Came From

This theme grew out of a mashup of influences—long conversations with writer friends, a subplot from Schlock Mercenary, and the realization that a “rogue Immortal” character needed a counterweight with a strong personal code. Around the same time, I was watching Breaking Bad, fascinated by characters like Mike Ehrmantraut—tough, pragmatic men who do terrible things for complicated reasons. To push back against such a villainous force, I imagined Sam Kletchka: a gunslinger in a messy, morally gray universe who lives by a code and keeps choosing the harder path simply because it’s right, even when the galaxy doesn’t care.

How Moral Courage Shapes the Story

At every major turning point in Gunslinger to the Stars, Sam Kletchka’s choices are defined by moral courage—the instinct to protect others even when it’s dangerous, inconvenient, or unwinnable. He charges after kidnapped empaths when walking away would be safer; he shields Jane’s diplomatic idealism with his hard-won pragmatism; he survives abandonment in the desert through sheer stubborn responsibility; and he repeatedly throws himself into battles around war rigs, jumpgates, and alien war parties because no one else can or will. His personal code drives the story’s conflicts, shapes the character dynamics, and pushes this space-opera adventure toward a climax where courage isn’t about glory but about doing the right thing in a lawless, unpredictable, morally gray galaxy.

What Moral Courage Says About Us

Sam’s story reflects something deeply human: we don’t get to choose the worlds we’re born into, but we do get to choose what kind of people we become. In a galaxy run by Immortals, riddled with slavers, warlords, and manipulative telepaths, Sam’s personal code becomes his anchor—the thing that keeps him from becoming the very wolf he warns Jane about. His courage isn’t flashy heroism; it’s the uncomfortable, everyday kind that demands sacrifice, loyalty, and integrity when it would be easier to look away. In that sense, the book becomes a mirror for readers who love character-driven science fiction that asks what we stand for when the world pushes back.

Why This Theme Matters to Me

I wrote this book at a very different time in my life—years after Genesis Earth, when my own view of the world had shifted. I still believed in cultural understanding and bridging divides, but I’d also seen enough to know that evil doesn’t always yield to good intentions. Like Sam, I firmly believe in the right to defend oneself and others, and I’ve had long debates about the responsibilities that come with that. I wanted to write a character who lives at the intersection of those values—someone who understands violence, hates it, but won’t walk away when others depend on him. That tension, that conviction, is why moral courage felt like the beating heart of Gunslinger to the Stars.

Where to Get the Book

Related Posts and Pages

Explore the series index for the Gunslinger Trilogy.

Return to the book page for Gunslinger to the Stars.

Discover if Gunslinger to the Stars is for you.

See all of my books in series order.