Skip to content

Small Publishing in a Big Universe Marketplace

A Marketplace for Independent Authors and Publishers

Menu
  • Podcast
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • 2025
      • January 2025
      • February 2025
      • October 2025
      • November 2025
      • December 2025
    • 2024
      • January 2024
      • February 2024
      • March 2024
      • April 2024
      • May 2024
      • June 2024
      • July 2024
      • September 2024
      • October 2024
      • November 2024
      • December 2024
    • 2023
      • January 2023
      • February 2023
      • March 2023
      • April 2023
      • May 2023
      • June 2023
      • July 2023
      • August 2023
      • September 2023
      • October 2023
      • November 2023
      • December 2023
    • 2022
      • January 2022
      • February 2022
      • March 2022
      • April 2022
      • May 2022
      • June 2022
      • July 2022
      • August 2022
      • September 2022
      • October 2022
      • November 2022
      • December 2022
    • 2021
      • August 2021
      • September 2021
      • October 2021
      • November 2021
      • December 2021
  • News
    • February 2026
    • January 2026
    • 2025
      • January 2025
      • February 2025
      • April 2025
      • June 2025
      • October 2025
      • November 2025
      • December 2025
    • 2024
      • January 2024
      • February 2024 (Live from Arisia)
      • February 2024 (Live from Boskone)
      • March 2024
      • April 2024
      • May 2024
      • June 2024
      • July 2024
      • September 2024
      • October 2024
      • November 2024
      • December 2024
    • 2023
      • October 2023
      • November 2023
      • December 2023
  • Events
    • 2025
      • Watch City Steampunk Festival 2025
      • Los Angeles Times Festival of Books 2025
      • Bay Area Book Festival 2025
      • BayCon 2025 / Westercon 77
      • Readercon 34 (2025)
      • WorldCon 2025
      • Loscon 51 (2025)
    • 2024
      • Arisia 2024
      • Boskone 2024
      • Watch City Steampunk Festival 2024
      • Bay Area Book Festival 2024
      • BayCon 2024
      • Readercon 33 (2024)
      • Loscon 50 (2024)
    • 2023
      • BayCon 2023
    • 2022
      • WorldCon 2022
  • Calendar
  • Book Tours
  • Partners
  • Calls for Submissions
  • About Us
    • Code of Conduct
    • Resources
    • Contact Us
Menu
COVER - The Lucky Starman

“The Lucky Starman” by Colin Alexander

The Lucky Starman - Colin Alexander

Colin Alexander has a new post-apocalyptic sci-fi book out, Leif the Lucky book 3: The Lucky Starman.

Is Leif really lucky? Stranded in orbit, viewing a destroyed civilization on Earth through the screens of a starship almost out of fuel and food, he doesn’t feel that way.

It wasn’t supposed to be like that.

As the starship Dauntless returns from a successful mission to the planet called Heaven, Earth holds no attractions for Exoplanetary Scout Leif Grettison. He wants only to complete the mission and leave for another star, along with ace pilot Yang Yong. In fact, he would be happy spending the rest of his life flying the starways with her.

But they and the rest of the ship’s skeleton crew awaken from hibernation to find Earth’s solar system dark and silent—no signals, no responses to their transmissions. When they make orbit, the magnitude of the disaster becomes clear: An apocalyptic war has killed billions and destroyed every last source of power and tech that 22nd-Century humans relied on to survive.

Getting down to Earth is only the beginning of Leif’s problems. Those few who survived the apocalypse are still divided, fighting over what’s left. The disastrous re-entry to Earth leaves him with no resources or allies. He lands in the middle of a makeshift family that needs him more than he’s comfortable with and hears stories—even nursery rhymes—that speak of a lucky starman. For once, he’s the only person with tech—but if he’s caught using it, they might kill him.

Can a man back from the stars end the warfare on Earth, or will he make it worse? Can he save a family that might become his? Is he everyone’s lucky starman?

Warnings: Combat situations (one-on-one and armies), named characters die

About the Series:

These are the adventures of Leif, who some have called the Lucky. They begin in the year 2069, when humanity’s last chance for peace is the first ever interstellar mission. However, when you believe you have thought of everything, the universe has a way of showing that you haven’t.

What do you do when it goes wrong, when you can’t call for help, and when adventure leads to deaths? If you survive one journey, what do you do next?

Get It On Amazon | Goodreads


Excerpt

The Lucky Starman - Colin Alexander

“Leif, we have a problem.”

I heard Charley’s voice as if from a great distance. The post-hib blur was a dense fog in my mind. I recognized the words but could not grasp their meaning. In my defense, I hadn’t even sat up in the hibernation unit yet; its bath was still draining.

I wrenched off the mask and cannula and removed the port from my arm. Then I sat up with a profound groan. Nearly four and a half years’ hibernating did more than blur the brain. Every muscle was stiff. I was surprised my joints didn’t squeak. Multiyear hib did not get better with repetition. I blinked and tried to bring Charley’s face into focus. Dr. Charles Osborne, I told myself. Our ship’s physician. He was supposed to be with me when I came out of hib. He had dark brown skin on a kindly round face, short black hair, and a closely cropped beard.

“Leif, we have a problem,” he repeated. “Yang needs you on the bridge.”

Why did there always have to be a problem? Why couldn’t someone say, Leif, life is great, and the world is beautiful. Why don’t you come share it? But, no, that’s not the way my life goes.

I groaned again and managed to say, “What?”

Charley shook his head. “I don’t know. Look, I’m sorry I didn’t get your equipment off first. I’m, I don’t know, worried. Here’s your OJ. Yang asked you to skip the gym. She really wants you on the bridge as soon as you can get there.”

That bit penetrated the blur. Yong had woken me early on the flight to High Noon, the very first starshot, when the ship’s computer tried to abort the mission after a hib failure. What was it this time?

I downed the orange juice with sugar in one fast chug. Having come out of four previous multiyear hib stretches on starflights, I had learned that the best way to return to the status of a functional human was to follow a carefully escalating workout routine in the gym. It felt awful while I was doing it, but it worked. There would be a good reason if Yang Yong wanted me to skip it. And the good reason would be something bad. Count on it.

I blinked again. “Can I at least get dressed and grab a couple of protein bars from the caf?” I did manage to get the croak out of my voice.

“I’m sure,” Charley said. “Just grab ’em and go to the bridge.”

“I’m on it,” I said. “Where’s the famous laxative pack?”

Charley had that in his other hand. The constipation from hib on an interstellar flight would not, in fact, kill you, but there were times I wished it would.

Once Charley left, I pulled myself out of the unit and stood up, shivering. My muscles shook trying to hold me upright. At least I’d done this often enough to know what would hurt most and how to manage it. The biggest problem was the knee that had been surgically rebuilt after I was wounded on Mindanao back in 2062. That was why I had left the Rangers and the service, and with each long hib, it got harder and harder to return it to normal.

No help for that. I settled for cursing long and loud while I toweled off. Then I pulled on the ship’s polo shirt with its NASA emblem over the left breast and my name, Grettison, embroidered below it. The starshot emblem of a gloved hand clutching a star above STARSHOT xv was stitched over the right breast. Ship pants, ankle socks, and ship boots completed the outfit. We were obviously decelerating at one gee because my weight felt normal, so I didn’t need the SureGrip soles for the StickStrips on the deck.

I pulled open the privacy screen around my unit and stepped out onto the hib deck. All the other units I could see were off. My adrenals squeezed immediately and I felt a sense of panic. Then my mind pulled its memories through the post-hib blur. Of course nearly all the units were empty and off. We had put the colonists down on the planet called Heaven, meaning only seven of us were on the Dauntless for the return to Earth.

I did a set of breathing exercises and got my heart rate and blood pressure under control. It wouldn’t do for me to have a stroke before I heard Yong’s problem. Maybe afterward, if it was bad enough.

With my legs wobbling under me, I took the lift to the deck where the caf was and grabbed energy bars. I took the time to eat one of them and chug another sugared orange juice. I needed to get to the bridge, but I also needed to not fall on my face when I got there.

When I entered the bridge, two energy bars swallowed and two more in my pocket, one of the chairs swiveled around. Yang Yong, pilot-in-command of the Dauntless, stood to greet me. She was a petite and slender woman with high cheekbones and brown hair cropped as short as mine. Small, yes, but there was nothing soft or delicate about her. She’d been a crack attack plane pilot for China’s People’s Liberation Army Air Force during the Troubles, which meant we had been on opposite sides of the fighting. Opposite sides, hell. She had damn near killed me on Mindanao when she bombed my platoon’s position the day the world almost ended.

Fortunately, our relationship had evolved from there. We were now two sides of the same coin and had decided to spend our lives flying through the universe together. It’s not that either one of us ever used the L‑word, but we knew what we meant to each other.

She did not smile at me. She did not even give me her tight little grin. I knew her well enough to tell that she was tense, though no one else would see any difference in the way she held herself.

If Yang Yong was tense, something was very, very wrong.

“What’s the problem?” I asked.

“I don’t know. We are not receiving anything.”

“Nothing?” I tried to wrap my mind around that and let my hand drop from the pocket with the energy bars. They could wait.

“Nothing,” she repeated. “We are inside the orbit of Pluto, and there is no signal from the International Space Commission. I have sent transmissions to Earthbase, NASA, and CNSA. We have received no response, and enough time has elapsed for a reply to reach us. Before you ask, I have checked over our equipment. It is fine. The solar system is silent.”


Author Bio

Colin Alexander

Colin Alexander is a writer of science fiction and fantasy. Actually, Colin Alexander is the pseudonym for Alton Kremer, maybe his alter ego, or who he would have been if he hadn’t been a physician and biochemist and had a career as a medical researcher. His most recent book, The Lucky Starman, is his ninth and the third of the Leif the Lucky novels. Colin is an active member of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers Association, Mystery Writers of America, and the Maine Writers & Publishers Alliance. Away from writing fiction, his idea of relaxation is martial arts (taekwondo and minna jiu jitsu). He lives in Maine with his wife.

  • Author Website: https://www.afictionado.com
  • Author Facebook (Author Page): https://www.facebook.com/ColinAlexanderAuthor
  • Author Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/colinalexander
  • Author Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/author/colinalexander

Other Worlds Ink logo

Join Our Mailing List

Loading

Follow Us

Facebook
Instagram
YouTube
LinkedIn

Search Our Site

Accepting Applications

We currently accepting applications for the Marketplace in the Dealers Room at Baycon 2026: Small Publishing in a Big Universe Marketplace Vendor Application.

Our Latest Episode

February 2026

Author Richard H Moon

In our interview with author Richard H Moon, we discuss his new novel, what drives him to write, and his advice for new authors.

Upcoming Events

April 2026

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
1
2
3
4
  • EVENT: Rinconada Book Fair

    EVENT: Rinconada Book Fair

    April 4, 2026  12:00 pm - 4:00 pm
    Palo Alto Art Center, 1313 Newell Rd, Palo Alto, CA 94303, USA

    Hear authors, editors, publishers and writing associations talk about their work and their services at this afternoon event in the Palo Alto Art Center auditorium. The event will include a moderated panel discussion or five authors and ten individual presentations. Ten tables are available for authors, editors, publishers and writing groups and participants will likely share a table depending on registration.
     
    https://paloalto.bibliocommons.com/events/68d5968262a8786065c4b119
     

    See more details

•
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
  • EVENT: Sacramento Book Festival 2026

    EVENT: Sacramento Book Festival 2026

    April 19, 2026  10:00 am - 5:00 pm
    Scottish Rite Masonic Center, 6151 H St, Sacramento, CA 95819, USA

    https://www.sacramentobookfestival.com/

    See more details

•
20
21
22
  • NEW EPISODES: Live from WorldCon 2025

    NEW EPISODES: Live from WorldCon 2025

    April 22, 2026

    See more details

•
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30

Our Latest News

  • Visit the Small Publishing in a Big Universe Marketplace at Loscon 51 November 24, 2025
  • Visit the Small Publishing in a Big Universe Marketplace at WorldCon 2025 August 11, 2025
  • Visit the Small Publishing in a Big Universe Marketplace at Readercon 34 July 17, 2025
  • Visit the Small Publishing in a Big Universe Marketplace at BayCon 2025 / Westercon 77 June 23, 2025
  • Event Report: Bay Area Book Festival 2025 June 5, 2025

Support Independent Bookstores

Bookshop

Support Our Sponsors

Water Dragon Publishing Paper Angel Press Cupid's Arrow Publishing Graveside Press
© 2026 Small Publishing in a Big Universe Marketplace | Powered by Superbs Personal Blog theme