Is Star Wanderers for You?

Star Wanderers is a character-driven frontier space opera and science fiction adventure about loneliness, love, and the search for home on the far edges of human civilization. It delivers a quiet, emotional adventure centered on wandering starship pilots and fragile outworld communities—less about conquering the stars and more about what it costs to keep moving when you don’t know where you belong.

What Kind of Reader Will Love Star Wanderers?

If you love…

  • frontier space opera with a lone-trader or wandering starship feel
  • character-driven science fiction focused on relationships, marriage, and family under pressure
  • stories where faith, conscience, and moral choice shape the action
  • found family science fiction set against danger, exile, and cultural collision
  • quieter, thoughtful adventures that balance tension with hope

…then Star Wanderers is probably your kind of story.

What You’ll Find Inside

Star Wanderers follows Jeremiah, an independent starship pilot drifting from port to port, whose life changes when he rescues a young woman from a dying frontier station and becomes entangled with her people, her faith, and her future. As pirates, famine, and outworld politics close in, the story explores loneliness, commitment, belief, and the cost of choosing to belong. The pacing blends reflective, intimate moments with sharp spikes of danger, resulting in a hopeful but hard-earned journey.

What Makes Star Wanderers Different

Rather than focusing on galaxy-spanning wars or elite soldiers, Star Wanderers centers on ordinary people trying to do the right thing in an unforgiving frontier. Romance, marriage, and faith aren’t side plots—they’re core engines of the story, shaping every major decision. The book treats technology and heroism pragmatically, favoring ingenuity, sacrifice, and cooperation over brute force or spectacle.

What You Won’t Find

This is not grimdark science fiction, nor is it nonstop military action. You won’t find cynical nihilism, endless explosions, or characters who survive purely on luck. Instead, the tension grows from moral choices, relationships under strain, and the consequences of standing your ground when running would be easier.

Why I Think You Might Love Star Wanderers

I put more of myself into Star Wanderers than almost anything else I’ve written. I began the story as a single young writer wrestling with loneliness and finished it while married and preparing for parenthood, and that journey shaped its heart. If you’re drawn to science fiction that treats love, faith, and responsibility as real forces—capable of both wounding and saving—I think this story will resonate with you.

Where to Get the Book

Related Posts and Pages

Explore the series index for the Outworld Trilogy.

Return to the book page for Star Wanderers.

Agency Under Tyranny in Bringing Stella Home

Bringing Stella Home is a character-driven military science fiction novel that asks a deceptively simple question: what does it mean to have agency when freedom has already been taken away? In a universe shaped by conquest and domination, the novel explores whether choice still matters when the best options have been stripped away. Rather than framing agency as escape or rebellion, the story focuses on the quieter, harder work of choosing who you will be under tyranny. Rather than centering on battles or political intrigue, the story is driven by character choices and moral tension within a military science fiction setting.

Where the Idea Came From

This theme grew directly out of my fears as an older brother. Growing up, I was deeply protective of my younger sisters, and the idea of not being able to save the people I love has always terrified me. That pushed the story away from a simple rescue narrative and toward a deeper exploration of agency, responsibility, and moral choice under tyranny.

How Agency Under Tyranny Shapes the Story

Stella’s storyline is where this theme takes its clearest form. Captured by the Hameji and absorbed into a system built on hierarchy, conquest, and dehumanization, she loses nearly every form of conventional freedom. She cannot leave. She cannot reshape the system that controls her. And yet, the novel insists that her choices still matter. Her agency survives not through open defiance, but through the moral boundaries she maintains, even when compliance would make her life easier or safer.

James’s journey reflects a different facet of the same theme. His actions are driven by loyalty, love, and a desire to restore what has been lost, but the story steadily challenges the idea that agency means control or correction. As events unfold, he is forced to confront the reality that respecting another person’s agency—especially under tyranny—may require restraint, humility, and the willingness to accept choices he cannot fully understand or direct.

What Agency Under Tyranny Says About Us

The theme of agency under tyranny speaks to a difficult truth about human nature: we do not always choose our circumstances, but we remain responsible for who we become within them. Tyranny works by narrowing choices until obedience feels inevitable, offering safety or comfort in exchange for moral surrender. Bringing Stella Home suggests that agency persists even in constrained forms, and that the decisions people make under pressure—often unseen and uncelebrated—still shape their identity, integrity, and future. This is a story for readers who are less interested in easy victories than in moral resilience, responsibility, and the cost of choosing well.

Why This Theme Matters to Me

I care about this theme because it reflects how life often actually works. We don’t always get clean victories or heroic options. Sometimes we are forced to live inside broken systems, painful relationships, or irreversible losses. Writing Bringing Stella Home was my way of wrestling with the belief that dignity, responsibility, and moral choice still matter—even when the world refuses to be fair, and even when doing the right thing doesn’t lead to the outcome we might hope for.

Where to Get the Book

Related Posts and Pages

Explore the series index for The Hameji Cycle.

Return to the book page for Bringing Stella Home.