Rating: Not rated
Tags: Fiction
Summary
Captain Alexander Outland of the Sixty-Nine (short for
Space Vessel 3369, of course) is the best pilot in the
galaxy. He’s also a pirate, a smuggler, and loved and
loathed by women in umpteen solar systems. His crew of strays
and misfits includes an engineer of dubious sanity, a deposed
planetary governor, an annoyingly unflappable Sexbot copilot,
and a slinky weapons chief who stubbornly refuses to give the
captain a tumble.
Outland just wants to make a decent living skirting the
law, but when an invisible space armada starts cutting into
his business, he soon finds himself in hot water with the
military, the mob, mad bombers, and an extended family of
would-be conquerors. And that’s not counting an
occasionally telepathic spy . . . .
Like any sensible scoundrel, he hates heroics.
They’re risky and they don’t pay well. But to
keep his ship and crew in one piece, and make time with a
certain hard-to-get weapons chief, he might just have to make
an exception–and save the galaxy in spite of himself!
G. J. Koch writes science fiction. Not the
hard stuff, though. Because that requires actual scientific
knowledge or at least actual scientific research. Knowledge
may be power and research may be cool, but they take time
away from writing jokes, action, and romance, and being witty
in the face of death is what it’s really all about.
Check out G. J.’s rollicking Alexander Outland: Space
Pirate series from Night Shade Books and reach G. J. at
Space…the Funny Frontier (Ginikoch.com).
About the Author