

But how can he enforce laws that are unjust? How can he sacrifice innocents to a system he's not sure he believes in? How can Miles Flint do the right thing in a universe where the right thing is very, very wrong? Flint must enforce the law-giving the children to aliens, solving the murders, and arresting the woman for running from the legal system. Miles Flint grapples with three cases that have collided: a stolen space-yacht filled with dead bodies, two kidnapped human children, and a human woman on the run to avoid alien prosecution, trying to become one of the Disappeared. But alien laws often seem senseless, and minor violations draw outrageous punishments-from death to the loss of a first-born child. Humans and aliens have formed a loose government called the Earth Alliance, with treaties that guarantee humans are subject to alien laws when on alien soil. Whose rules does Detective Miles Flint live by? Retrieved October 31, 2010."…one of the top science fiction sagas in recent years." Internet Review of Science Fiction VII (1).

12: The Peyti Crisis: Anniversary Day Saga, Book 5, 2015 11: Search & Recovery: Anniversary Day Saga, Book 4, 2015 10: A Murder of Clones: Anniversary Day Saga, Book 3, 2015 9: Blowback: Anniversary Day Saga, Book 2, 2012 8: Anniversary Day: Anniversary Day Saga, Book 1, 2011


Room of Lost Souls, Asimov’s cover story, April/May 2008.Diving into The Wreck, Asimov’s cover story, December 2005.Skirmishes, WMG Publishing, September 2013.Ron Hubbard Presents Writers of the Future Volume VII, pp. 322–329. Echoes, additionally with Nina Kiriki Hoffman, 1998.Kristine Kathryn Rusch Jerry Oltion (Oct–Nov 1997).Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith use the common pseudonym “Kathryn Wesley” for a part of their collaborative works. Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: The Big Game, 1993.Kristine Kathryn Rusch and Dean Wesley Smith use the common pseudonym “Sandy Schofield” for a part of their collaborative works.
