Eddie Cantrell, now married to the king of Denmark’s daughter, is sent by Admiral Simpson to the Caribbean to secure
access to the most valuable commodity on that continent—not the gold and silver which the Spanish treasure, but the
oil which up‑time machines and industry need. The admiral has also provided Eddie’s small task force with the new
steam‑powered frigates that have just come out of the navy’s shipyards.
Even with the frigates, a giant obstacle stands in his way: the Gulf‑girdling Spanish presence in the New World. So a
diversion is needed, carried out by an up‑time car mechanic and a down‑time mercenary colonel who also happens to
be the last earl of Ireland. Their mission: grab the oil fields on Trinidad, and so distract the attention of Spain’s New
World governors.
While the Spanish galleons and troops head for Trinidad, Commander Cantrell’s smallest and fastest steam sloop will
make a run to the Louisiana coast. There, her crew will wind their way up the bayous to the real New World prize: the
Jennings Oil Field.
But Cantrell’s plans could be wrecked in a multitude of ways. He faces often‑hostile natives, rambunctious Dutch ship
captains, allied colonies on the brink of starvation, and vicious social infighting that can barely be contained by his
capable and passionate new wife. When the galleons finally come out in force to engage his small flotilla, Eddie will
discover that the Spanish aren’t the only enemies who will be coming against him in a fateful Caribbean show‑down.
Listen to the authors discuss the book here on the Baen Free Radio Hour.
The full book is available to download in all 7 DRM-free formats
The first human mission to Mars meets with near‑disaster when a meteoroid strikes the spacecraft, almost destroying
it. The ship is too far from Earth to simply turn around and return home. The eight‑person crew must ride their
crippled ship to Mars while they desperately struggle to survive.
On Earth, powerful political forces that oppose human spaceflight try to use the accident as proof that sending humans
into space is too dangerous to continue. The whole human space flight program hangs in the balance. And if the
astronauts can’t nurse their ship to Mars and back, the voyagers will become either the first Martian colonists—or the
first humans to perish on another planet.
Listen to the authors discuss the book here on the Baen Free Radio Hour.
Kothifir the Great, ruled by an obscenely obese god‑king, peopled with colorful, dueling guilds, guarded by the
Southern Host of the Kencyrath. Here Jame arrives, only to find that the turbulent city claims more of her attention as
the Talisman than the Host’s training fields do as a second year randon cadet.
Mysteries abound: Caravans plunge deep into the hostile Southern Wastes and return laden with fabulous riches ‑‑
from what source, and why do they crumble to dust if not claimed by the god‑king’s touch? Karnids from Urakarn
prowl the shadows, preaching the return of their mysterious prophet. An unstable Kencyr temple rumbles in the outer,
decayed rings of the city. Then too, someone in the Host’s camp is trying to get Jame killed.
In order to save the present, Jame must search the past, be it fifteen years ago when as a boy her brother Torisen
arrived here, unknown and unwanted, or three thousand years ago when the Wastes were a great sea ringed with rich
civilizations. Somehow, Tori survived. Somehow, the cities of the plain were destroyed in one catastrophic night. Now
Kothifir's gods have lost their power and its proud towers are falling. What curse out of the past has struck it? Jame, a
potential Nemesis, must try to stop the destruction‑‑without undoing time itself.
Listen to the author discuss the book here on the Baen Free Radio Hour.
There are those living secretly among us who have the power to change their physical form from that of a human to an
animal, even animals thought to be mythical, such as dragons. Throughout out the ages, these shape shifters have come
together to protect themselves from humans—and other shape shifters. One of those places they’ve come together is
the town of Goldport, Colorado.
Draw One in the Dark
Someone—or something—has been killing shifters in large numbers, and the most ancient and powerful of shifters are
converging on the Goldport to find the killer. According to their code, killing another shifter is a crime, no matter if the
shifter was slaughtering humans. Now Kyrie Smith, a young panther shifter, must decide where she will stand: with
her group or with humanity at large.
Gentleman Takes a Chance
Every one of us has the beast inside. But for Kyrie Smith, the beast is no metaphor. She can shape shift into a savage,
black panther. Kyrie's lonely life changes forever while waitressing at a diner in Goldport, Colorado. Investigating
frantic screams from the parking lot, Kyrie stumbles upon a blood‑spattered dragon crouching over a mangled human
corpse. The dragon shape‑shifts back into her co‑worker, Tom. Now Kyrie and Tom must discover if their human
sides can survive or if a war among shifters will bring out the beasts in them—permanently.
It's hard to give peace a chance when the other side regards war as the necessary prelude to conquest, and a sneak attack as the best means to that end. That's why the Kingdom of Manticore needs allies against the so-called "Republic" of Haven--and the planet Grayson is just the right strategic place to make a very good ally indeed. But Her Majesty's Foreign Office had overlooked a "minor cultural difference" when they chose Honor Harrington to carry the flag: women on the planet Grayson are without rank or rights; Honor's very presence is an intolerable affront to every male on the planet.
At first Honor doesn't take it personally; where she comes from gender discrimination is barely a historical memory, right up there in significance to fear of the left-handed. But in time such treatment as she receives from the Graysonites does become wearing, and Honor would withdraw if she could--but then Grayson's fratricidal sister planet attacks without warning and she must stay and prevail, not just for Honor's honor, but for her sovereign's, for--THE HONOR OF THE QUEEN.
Listen to the author discuss the book on the Baen Free Radio Hour: Part 1 | Part 2.
Gritty urban fantasy adventure set in an alternate noir 1930s, Book Three in the Grimnoir chronicles.
Only a handful of people in the world know that mankind's magic comes from a living creature, and it is a refugee from another universe. The Power showed up here in the 1850s because it was running from something. Now it is 1933, and the Power's hiding place has been discovered by a killer.
It is a predator that eats magic and leaves destroyed worlds in its wake. Earth is next.
Former private eye, Jake Sullivan, knows the score. The problem is hardly anyone believes him. The world's most capable Active, Faye Vierra, could back him up, but she is hiding from the forces that think she is too dangerous to let live. So Jake has put together a ragtag crew of airship pirates and Grimnoir knights, and set out on a suicide mission to stop the predator before it is too late.
Listen to the author discuss the book here on the Baen Free Radio Hour.
Pirates of the Caribbean meets times traveling heroes and godlike aliens. Sequel to Sunset of the Gods and Blood of Heroes.
Special operations officer Jason Thanou of the Temporal Regulatory Authority must once again plunge into Old Earth's blood‑drenched past to combat the plots of the Transhumanist underground to subvert that past and create a secret history leading up to the fulfillment of their mad dream of transforming humanity into a race of gods and monsters.
Jason and his companions travel to the seventeenth century encounter the real pirates of the Caribbean—including a beautiful she‑pirate who turns out to be Transhumanist renegade. To Jason's horror, he also learns that the Teloi aliens who were the grim reality behind the pagan pantheons of antiquity—aliens Jason believed he'd successfully destroyed—are still active, and aiding the Transhumanists in founding an unspeakable cult. What's more, these are a different—and far more dangerous—breed of Teloi than before.
Jason must somehow thwart the plans of the sinister allies while at the same time preventing reality itself from falling into chaos. In the end he finds himself venturing into space with a totally unexpected ally: Henry Morgan.
Listen to the author discuss the book here on the Baen Free Radio Hour.
Divide and Rule:
What happens when the "hoppers" (invaders from another world, they look rather like kangeroos) take over? Well, knighthood flowers, for one thing--knighthood enforced by the aliens, who see it as an easy way of keeping Earth's population in subjection, But knighthood (in spite of a few drawbacks like uncomfortable armor) comes naturally to Sir Howard Van Slyck, second son of the Duke of Poughkeepsie. His family motto is "Give 'Em the Works"--and the hoppers wind up learning exactly how distasteful the "Works" of human ingenuity can be.
The Stolen Dormouse:
The Earth turns feudal again, but this time it's through its own doing. Giant corporations have turned into clans within the American Empire, clans that do not hesitate to do battle when honor is at stake. The Crosleys and the Strombergs are in a kind of cold war when the incident of the disappearing dormouse--an engineer in a state of suspended animation--precipitates a chain of violence that is a hilarious as it is exciting.