The Ring of Fire Press was created in 2013 to release material in the 1632 series that was originally published as serials over successive issues of The Grantville Gazettes magazine. Beginning in 2018, they had released original material in the 1632 series, and had published other works.
On August 16, 2022, Lucille Robbins, the widow of Eric Flint, officially announced the immediate shutdown of both The Grantville Gazette and the Ring of Fire Press. Without a huge infusion of new cash, it was determined that both business ventures would not be economically viable without Flint's participation.[1] [2] As a result, all titles became out-of-print; ebook distribution had ceased, and the limited pre-existing stock of new paper editions at authorized retailers will disappear soon.
Some authors, such as Bjorn Hasseler have made arrangements with Baen Books to have Baen republish and distribute their books, while other authors, such as Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett have decided on the self-publishing route via Amazon (which limit distributions to third-party resellers). Since not all authors have found a new publisher, some titles might remain out-of-print for some time.
Title | Publication date | Authors | ISBN | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Essen Steel | June 2013 | Kim Mackey | Originally published as a serial in 3 parts in Gazette volumes 7–9 as The Essen Chronicles.[3] | ||
The Danish Scheme | June 2013 | Herbert Sakalaucks and Eric Flint | Originally published as a serial in 9 parts in Gazette volumes 22, 23, 28–31, and 33–35 as Northwest Passage. Heavily rewritten and includes new material by Herbert Sakalaucks plus a new short story by Eric Flint.[4] | ||
Joseph Hanauer | June 2013 | Douglas W. Jones | Originally published as a serial in 3 parts in Gazette volumes 8, 13, and 14.[5] | ||
No Ship for Tranquebar | June 2013 | Kevin H. Evans and Karen C. Evans | Originally published as a serial in 4 parts in Gazette volumes 27–30.[6] | ||
Turn Your Radio On | June 2013 | Wood Hughs | Originally published as a serial in 6 parts in Gazette volumes 19–24.[7] | ||
Second Chance Bird | June 2013 | Garret W. Vance | Originally published as a serial in 13 parts in Gazette volumes 32–41, and 43–45. Minor re-write from serial version.[8] | ||
Medicine and Disease after the Ring of Fire | June 2013 | Vincent Coljee, Kim Mackey, Gus Kiritikos, Brad Banner, and Iver Cooper | A collection of 8 separate non-fiction articles originally published in Gazette volumes 10, 26, 29, 34, 35, and 38.[9] | ||
Bartley's Man | August 2016 | Paula Goodlett and Gorg Huff | Originally published as a serial in 3 parts in Gazette volumes 46–48. Re-written with new material added.[10] | ||
The Muse of Music | January 2017 | Enrico Toro and David Carrico | Originally published as 7 related stories in Gazette volumes 2, 3, 5, 13, 31, 44, 45, and 46 under various titles. Includes 2 non-fiction articles.[11] | ||
Love and Chemistry | February 2017 | Jack Carroll and Edith Wild | Originally published as a serial in 6 parts in Gazette volumes 49–54 as The Undergraduate. Re-written with new material added.[12] | ||
1635: The Battle for Newfoundland | January 2018 | Herbert Sakalaucks | Sequel to The Danish Scheme. New material. First novel published by the press from unpublished material.[13] | ||
Essen Defiant | March 2018 | Kim Mackey and David Carrico | Sequel to Mackey's Essen Steel. New material that has never been previously published. This book also help set up the events that led to the beginning to Pedersen's book 1635: The Wars for the Rhine that was first published in 2016.[14] | ||
The Monster Society | April 2018 | Eric S. Brown, Robert E. Waters and Anna G. Carpenter | Originally published as a serial in 8 parts in Gazette volumes 61–71 plus one original installment with a promise that the storyline introduced in the new story would be continued in the Gazette.[15] | ||
Letters From Gronow | May 2018 | David Carrico | Originally published as a serial in 6 parts in Gazette volumes 70–75. Includes new material that continues the story.[16] | ||
The Persistence of Dreams | May 2018 | Meriah L. Crawford and Robert E. Waters | Originally published as a series of semi-related short stories about painter Daniel Block in Gazette volumes 46, 50, 60, 61, 62, and 67. The short story The Winter Canvas: A Daniel Block Story was awarded the Gazette's Best of 2016 Award.[17] Includes minor changes.[18] | ||
The Hunt for The Red Cardinal | June 2018 | Bradley H. Sinor and Susan P. Sinor | Includes a new novel that is an expansion of their D'Artagnan short stories that were published in Gazette volumes 10 and 41, and Ring of Fire III, which are also included.[19] | ||
The Chrysanthemum, the Cross, and the Dragon | August 2018 | Iver P. Cooper | New novel containing original unpublished material about the invasion of the Spanish Philippines by the Dutch and Japanese, an event that was briefly hinted at in Cooper's previous work 1636: Seas of Fortune, and also about the peaceful transfer of Spanish Formosa (northern Taiwan) to Zheng Zhilong, a private merchant and an admiral in the Ming navy, approximately 30 years ahead of schedule.[20] | ||
The Legions of Pestilence | April 2019 | Virginia DeMarce | Includes material that was previously published in six parts in volumes 52–57 of the Gazette as An Uneasy Kind of Peace with brand new material about the development and growth of the buffer state between France and the USE called the County of Burgundy.[21] | ||
The Legend of Jimmy Dick | June 2019 | Terry Howard | Includes material that was previously published as short stories in the Gazette from volumes 5 through 35 plus new material.[22] | ||
Up-time Pride and Down-time Prejudice | August 2019 | Mark H. Huston | New material that has a 1632 twist on the similarly named Jane Austen novel.[23] This book was a finalist for the 2020 Dragon Award for Best Alternate History Novel[24] | ||
A Red Son Rises in the West | September 2019 | John Deakins and Herb Sakalaucks | A new and not previously published novel about a young Native American's journey to Grantville and back to his homeland in what is now New England.[25] | ||
The Trouble with Huguenots | November 2019 | Virginia DeMarce | Adventures of the Dr. Seuss loving Duke Henri de Rohan and his family that was previously published in several issues of the Grantville Gazette and Ring of Fire IV plus new material.[26] | ||
Magdeburg Noir | January 2020 | David Carrico | Another Carrico 1632 police drama; a follow up to 1635: Music and Murder and 1636: The Devil's Opera. Material that was previously published in the Grantville Gazette plus some new material.[27] | ||
A Holmes For the Czar | February 2020 | Paula Goodlett and Gorg Huff | A detective story set in Goodlett and Huff's Russian sub-thread that started with 1636: The Kremlin Games and 1637: The Volga Rules. New material.[28] Two Cases for the Czar is the sequel to this book. | ||
Fire on the Rio Grande | March 2020 | Kevin H. Evans and Karen C. Evans | An Encyclopædia Britannica article from Grantville introduces new ideas to remote the Spanish North American outpost of Santa Fe de Nuevo México. Would the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 occur ahead of schedule with the same deadly results? New material.[29] | ||
A Red Son: Not Without Honor | July 2020 | John Deakins | Sequel to A Red Son Rises in the West. Brand new material.[30] | ||
Tales From the Mermaid and Tiger: Engines of Change | September 2020 | Kevin H. Evans and Karen C. Evans | A compilation of 7 short stories that were previous published in the Gazette from volumes 55 through 66 that centered around the chocolate and uptimer-style food cafe that is operated in Copenhagen by uptimer Reva Pridmore plus new material that bind the separate stories together to create a unified narrative.[31] | ||
Things Could Be Worse: The Pastor Kastenmayer Stories | October 2020 | Virginia DeMarce | New and old material.[32] | ||
Two Cases for the Czar | November 2020 | Paula Goodlett and Gorg Huff | Sequel to A Holmes For the Czar. Another mysterious death has occurred in Russia which only the Czar's detective can solve.[33] | ||
Designed to Fail | December 2020 | Virginia DeMarce | Prince Frederik of Denmark, the second son of King Christian IV, gets appointed the governor of the new province of Westphalia in the USE, where he seems to encounter nothing but problems.[34] | ||
The Grantville Inquisitor | January 2021 | Bradley H. Sinor and Tracy S. Morris | Collection of short stories about the adventures of two reporters working for the Grantville Inquisitor. Mostly new material based upon characters that was first introduced in the Ring of Fire II anthology and various issues of the Gazette.[35] | ||
A Matter of Security | March 2021 | Bjorn Hasseler | Down-time ex-mercenaries form a security firm based upon uptime principles. Includes new material plus material previously published in the Gazette.[36] Republished in 2024 by Baen Books.[37] | ||
A Mission for the Czar | June 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | Sequel to Two Cases for the Czar. Vasilii and Miroslava return to solve another case.[38] | ||
Missions of Security | June 2021 | Bjorn Hasseler | Sequel to A Matter of Security.[39] Republished in 2024 by Baen Books.[40] | ||
Saving The Dodo | July 2021 | Garret W. Vance | Originally published in June 2013 as Second Chance Bird, but extensively rewritten with lots of new material.[41] | ||
The Horsewoman | July 2021 | Karen Bergstralh | A commemorative publication of the late Bergstralh's complete work of short stories and non-fiction articles from the Grantville Gazette (2003–2011).[42] | ||
Mrs. Flannery's Flowers | August 2021 | Bethanne Kim | A young college student's short visit to her parents home in Grantville to do laundry in 2000 turns out to unexpected trip to 17th century Germany.[43] | ||
Security Threats | November 2021 | Bjorn Hasseler | New material. Sequel to Missions of Security.[44] Republished in 2024 by Baen Books.[45] | ||
A 1632 Christmas | December 2021 | Edited by Walt Boyes, Joy Ward, and Bjorn Hasseler | An anthology of 21 Christmas (and Hanukkah) related short stories in the 1632-verse by Eric Flint and his many collaborators.[46] | ||
The Gourmets of Grantville | December 2021 | Bethanne Kim | What happens when recipes and cooking techniques from 20th century America gets blended with 17th century German ingredients and culinary traditions? A Grantville version of fusion cuisine that would have inspired Wolfgang Puck.[47] | ||
The Marshals | January 2022 | Mike Watson | An expansion and continuation of the six stories that were first published in the Gazette volume 68 about the start of the SoTF marshals service in Suhl that serves the district court based in the same city. 19th century American southwest law enforcement solving crimes in 17th century Germany.[48] | ||
The Unexpected Sales Reps | February 2022 | Virginia DeMarce | A story about two not very successful con artists who decided to become spies. Or "How to succeed at spying without really trying..."[49] | ||
I Want to Be Your Hero | March 2022 | Kerryn Offord | Novelization of Offord's John Felix “Puss” Trelli short stories that appeared in the Gazette volumes 34, 35, 39, 47, 49, and 80.[50] | ||
The Private Casefiles of Archie Gottesfreund | July 2022 | David Carrico | A story about a former half-Scot/half-German mercenary turned detective.[51] |
In October 2018, the Ring of Fire Press began releasing novels that are part of the Time Spike series that were previously published as serials in the Grantville Gazette.
Title | Publication date | Authors | ISBN | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Time Spike: The Mysterious Mesa | October 2018 | Garrett W. Vance | Originally published as a serial in 11 parts in Gazette volumes 39–60 that is set in the Cretaceous Period of Time Spike that involved a U.S. cavalryman from 1838 and a Spanish soldier from 1540.[52] | ||
Time Spike: The First Cavalry of the Cretaceous | June 2022 | Garrett W. Vance | Sequel to Time Spike: The Mysterious Mesa that was originally published as a serial in 9 parts in Gazette volumes 62–99. |
In August 2021, the Ring of Fire Press began releasing novels that are part of the Queen of the Seas series.
In April 2017, the Ring of Fire Press began releasing novels that were not a part of either the 1632 or Assiti Shards book series.
Title | Publication date | Authors | ISBN | Series | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Incident in Alaska Prefecture | April 2017 | Stoney Compton | Prefecture | A novel set in Japanese-occupied Alaska 22 years after the Axis powers had won World War II.[54] | ||
The Demons of Paris | March 2018 | Eric Flint, Gorg Huff, and Paula Goodlett | Demon Rift | The first book in the Demon Rift series involving 21st century high school students in a van, 14th century Paris, and demons taking control of mechanical and electronic devices.[55] | ||
Pandora's Crew | June 2018 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | StarWings | Space opera novel that include corporate intrigue, enhanced humans, artificial brains, and space pirates; first book of the StarWings series.[56] | ||
Emergence | June 2018 | David R. Palmer | Stand-alone | Reprint of award-winning novel that was first published in 1984.[57] | ||
The Masks of Mirada | July 2018 | Robert E. Waters | Mask Cycle | Sword and magic novel; first book of the Mask Cycle series.[58] | ||
Demons of the Past: Revolution | October 2018 | Ryk E. Spoor | Demons of the Past | Second book in Spoor's Demons of the Past series.[59] | ||
Perdition | October 2018 | Marella Sands | Perdition | An alternate history in which the United States had fragmented into several smaller independent countries after the Union allowed the secession by the Southern States after four bloody years of conflict to end the Civil War and how things had changed by the 21st century.[60] | ||
Threshold | November 2018 | David R. Palmer | Stand-alone | Reprint of a novel that was first published in 1985.[61] | ||
Big Stick | November 2018 | Michael A. Ventrella | Stand-alone | A steampunk alternate history that involves Teddy Roosevelt and a number of other notables at the end of the nineteenth century.[62] | ||
WarSpell: The Merge | December 2018 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell | A group of tabletop RPG players "merge" with the characters they've played, gaining new memories and magical powers. First book in the WarSpell series[63] | ||
Demons of the Past: Retribution | March 2019 | Ryk E. Spoor | Demons of the Past | Third and final book in his Demons of the Past series.[64] | ||
Legend | March 2019 | Ryk E. Spoor | Stand-alone | Psychotic Super heroes.[65] | ||
Lost Signals of the Terran Republic | March 2019 | Charles E. Gannon (editor) | Terran Republic | An anthology containing short stories from different authors that are set in the universe of Gannon's Terran Republic series.[66] | ||
Death Lives in the Water | April 2019 | Shoshana Edwards | Stand-alone | Supernatural rural police mystery.[67] | ||
Ganny Knits a Spaceship | April 2019 | David Gerrold | Stand-alone | A space opera from an established SF author and screenwriter who has written episodes of the original Star Trek series. Based upon a 2009 short story of the same name that was first published in Jim Baen's Universe.[68] | ||
The Vampiress of Londinium | May 2019 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell | Second book in the WarSpell series. A fictional vampire merges with a sixty-two-year-old grandmother.[69] | ||
Twilight of Empire | June 2019 | Stoney Compton | Prefecture | Sequel to Incident in Alaska Prefecture; second book in series[70] | ||
Tracking | June 2019 | David R. Palmer | Stand-alone | Reprint as a single volume of a trilogy of short stories that were first published in Analog magazine in 2008; sequel to Emergence.[71] | ||
Venus, Mars and Hell | July 2019 | John Lambshead and Eric Flint | Stand-alone | Another space opera. Starships, spirit guides, black magic and the problem of the correct sequence of cutlery usage in the Officer's Mess.[72] | ||
City by the Bay: Stories of Novaya Rossiya | July 2019 | Walter H. Hunt | Stand-alone | An anthology of novellas and short stories of an alternative history in which the Spanish abandon Northern California to the Russians during the early 19th century and the growth of Russian St. Helena,on the site our San Francisco, from 1816 to 1906.[73] | ||
Special Education: To Halt Armageddon | August 2019 | David R. Palmer | Tracking | The long waited sequel to Tracking; was completed 20 years ago, but remained unpublished until 2019.[74] | ||
The Company Man | September 2019 | Edward M. Lerner | Stand-alone | Original published in six parts as a continuing serial in the Universe Annex section of the Grantville Gazette from volume 71 to volume 83.[75] | ||
Purgatory | October 2019 | Marella Sands | Perdition | Sequel to Perdition, an alternative world in which the Confederacy had survived to modern times as one of many small successor states that resulted from the break-up of the United States after the Civil War in which the Confederates won their independence.[76] | ||
Everything Works in Theory | October 2019 | K.B. Bogen | Stand-alone | Paranormal & Urban Fantasy[77] | ||
London Days, Demon Nights | November 2019 | John Lambshead | Stand-alone | Vampires and demons in 21st century London.[78] | ||
Arachne's Webs | December 2019 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | StarWings | Second book in the StarWings series; sequel to Pandora's Crew.[79] | ||
Bloodsuckers: A Vampire Runs for President | December 2019 | Michael A. Ventrella | Stand-alone | Another vampire book. Blood suckers in Washington D.C.[80] | ||
The Thief of Cragsport | February 2020 | Robert E Waters | Mast Cycle | Second book in The Mask Cycle series; sequel to The Masks of Mirada[81] | ||
The Rat Rebellion | March 2020 | Paula Goodlett and Gorg Huff | StarWings | Third book in the StarWings series; not a real sequel, but a semi-independent story in the same universe about a woman stranded on a space station who eventually starts a revolution among the station's underprivileged known as "station rats".[82] | ||
A Song of Passing | March 2020 | David Carrico | Stand-alone | Another sword and sorcery book.[83] | ||
Diamonds Are Forever | March 2020 | Eric Flint and Ryk E. Spoor | Stand-alone | A reissue. Story originally published by Baen in the 2004 anthology Mountain Magic.[84] | ||
Blood's Call | April 2020 | David Carrico | Stand-alone | A Scottish sword and sorcery novel.[85] | ||
The Demons of Constantinople | May 2020 | Eric Flint, Gorg Huff, and Paula Goodlett | Demon Rift | Second book in the Demon Rift series; sequel to The Demons of Paris[86] | ||
Dark Day, Bright Hour | May 2020 | Julie Frost | Stand-alone | A hitman and an innocent woman find themselves in Hell.[87] | ||
The Mask of Ares | June 2020 | Ryk E. Spoor | Godswar | First book in the Godswar series.[88] | ||
Blood's Cost | June 2020 | David Carrico | Blood's Call | Sequel to Blood's Call[89] | ||
After Hastings | June 2020 | Steven H Silver | Stand-alone | An alternate history in which Harold Godwinson prevented the Norman conquest of Britain by defeating William the Conqueror at the Battle of Hastings. This is Silver's first novel.[90] | ||
Perfection | July 2020 | Marella Sands | Perdition | A sequel to both Purgatory and Perdition in which the United States had fragmented into a series of small nations after the Confederacy left the Union at the end of the Civil War.[91] | ||
The Newton Cipher | July 2020 | Steve Ruskin | Trina Piper Thrillers | First book in the Trina Piper Thrillers series. A historian is involved in a mystery, with unexplained murders, involving a coded manuscript from Sir Isaac Newton.[92] | ||
The Portals of Hell | August 2020 | Nathan Dodge | Portals | Monsters coming through a just opened portal.[93] | ||
Marked Territory | August 2020 | Neal F. Litherland | Stand-alone | Fantasy mystery novel involving a cat that can talk to mice and other species.[94] | ||
Heart of the World | August 2020 | Cecelia Holland | Stand-alone | A historical fiction about characters who were involved during the Siege of Bagdad of 1258 by the Mongols.[95] | ||
Stand by for Mars (Tom Corbett, Space Cadet) | September 2020 | Carey Rockwell | Tom Corbett, Space Cadet | A reprint of a 1952 pulp classic.[96] | ||
Border Crosser | September 2020 | Tom Doyle | Stand-alone | Another space opera.[97] | ||
Jamaica Blue Magic | September 2020 | Kathleen Moffre-Spoor and Ryk E. Spoor | Fall of Veils series | Monster hunting in Jamaica. Second book in the Fall of Veils series[98] | ||
The Dragon's Boy | September 2020 | David Carrico | Dragon Wizard | Dragons! First book in The Dragon Wizard series[99] | ||
Old Nathan | October 2020 | David Drake | Stand-alone | Magic in Appalachia[100] | ||
Blood of a Nation | October 2020 | Wayland Smith | Stand-alone | The blood drinking undead gets involved in the American War of Independence.[101] | ||
Nevada Rails | November 2020 | Cecelia Holland | Stand-alone | Historical fiction set in lawless 19th century California. Appears to be a reprint of Holland's 1997 novel Railroad Schemes, or at least set in the same universe.[102] | ||
The Portals of Spring | November 2020 | Nathan Dodge | Portals | A second portals book.[103] | ||
From the Ashes of a Dead World | November 2020 | Shane Gries | Ashes Saga | Another space opera. First book in the Ashes Saga series.[104] | ||
Treadwell: A novel of Alaska Territory | November 2020 | Stoney Compton | Gastineau Channel Quartet | Reprint of an Alaskan historic fiction novel from Stoney Compton.[105] | ||
The Dragon's Apprentice | December 2020 | David Carrico | Dragon Wizard | Second book in The Dragon Wizard series.[106] | ||
WarSpell: Space Race | December 2020 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell | Third book in the WarSpell series.[107] | ||
Tools of the Trade | December 2020 | Wayland Smith | Stand-alone | A deal that a widower with powerful mystical beings to revenge his wife's death at the hand of a drunk driver comes at a steep cost.[108] | ||
The Angel and the Sword | January 2021 | Cecelia Holland | reprint | Vikings attack ninth century Paris. Reprint of a historical fiction that was first published in 2000.[109] | ||
Crawlspace: and Other Stories | January 2021 | Dave Freer and Eric Flint | Rats, Bats and Vats series | Anthology of short stories; reprint.[110] | ||
The Portals of Summer | January 2021 | Nathan Dodge | Portals | Third book in the Portals series.[111] | ||
Colony High | February 2021 | David Brin | High Horizon | High students and aliens. First book of the High Horizon series.[112] | ||
Anoria | February 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | A Family of Wizards | Orphan girls and magic. First book in A Family of Wizards series.[113] | ||
The Spear of Athena | February 2021 | Ryk E. Spoor | Godswar | Second book in the Godswar series.[114] | ||
The Dragon's Wizard | February 2021 | David Carrico | Dragon Wizard | Third book in The Dragon Wizard series.[115] | ||
Daggers in Darkness | March 2021 | S. M. Stirling | Treasures of Tartary | First book in the Treasures of Tartary trilogy, which is the sequel to the Tales from the Black Chamber trilogy, an alternate history in which Teddy Roosevelt served a third term as president of a United States which had annexed Canada and Mexico.[116] | ||
The Bear Flag | March 2021 | Cecelia Holland | Stand-alone | Historical novel set during the Californian Bear Flag Rebellion from Mexico.[117] | ||
I, One | March 2021 | Nathan B. Dodge | Stand-alone | A tale about a self-aware android.[118] | ||
French Roast Apocalypse | April 2021 | Kathleen Moffre-Spoor and Ryk E. Spoor | Fall of Veils series | Monsters in a Paris coffeehouse. First book in the Fall of Veils series.[119] | ||
The Melody of Memory | April 2021 | Cheryl Brin | Stand-alone | A tale about a dystopian colony world.[120] | ||
Pacific Street | April 2021 | Cecelia Holland | Stand-alone | Historical novel set in San Francisco during the 1849 Gold Rush.[121] | ||
From the Ashes of Interstellar Empire | April 2021 | Shane Gries | Ashes Saga | Second book in the Ashes Saga series.[122] | ||
Born in Magic: Cordelia Cooper: Book One | April 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | A Family of Wizards | Second book (prequel) in A Family of Wizards series.[123] | ||
The Sherlock Chronicles & The Paradise Quartet | May 2021 | Edward M. Lerner | Stand-alone | Two novelas, one about A.I.s and other about the results of colonization of an exoplanet.[124] | ||
Painted Cats | May 2021 | Neal F. Litherland | unnamed cat series | Further adventures of Leo the cat. A catastrophic sequel to Marked Territory.[125] | ||
Shadows of Hyperion | May 2021 | Ryk E. Spoor | Arenaverse | Fourth book in the Arenaverse series.[126] | ||
11,000 Years | May 2021 | Mark Roth-Whitworth | Stand-alone | Another space opera.[127] | ||
Megan Thomas Forensic Sorceress | June 2021 | Bradley H. Sinor | Stand-alone | CSI with magic.[128] | ||
WarSpell: Miss Midshipman Teasdale | June 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell | Fourth book in the WarSpell series.[129] | ||
Old Soldiers | June 2021 | Neal F. Litherland | Stand-alone | Military space opera.[130] | ||
Sit, Stay, Kill | July 2021 | Kate Dane | Stand-alone | A woman discovered that the abused dog that she had rescued is actually a handsome werewolf that she can magically control.[131] | ||
Demon Lord of Elysium | July 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | Demon Rift | Third book in the Demon Rift series.[132] | ||
Demons of the Past: Revelation | July 2021 | Ryk E. Spoor | Demons of the Past | Reprint of the first book in Spoor's Demons of the Past series.[133] | ||
Subway in the Sky | August 2021 | Nathan B. Dodge | Subway Trilogy | A trio of engineers developed a system of stable wormholes which allow people to travel the solar system without the need of vehicles. What can go wrong? Alien invasions. Martial strife. Workplace romance. First book of Dodge's Subway Trilogy.[134] | ||
Castaways of New Mojave | August 2021 | David Brin and Jeff Carlson | High Horizon | Second book of the High Horizon series.[135] | ||
Schrödinger's Frisbee | September 2021 | David R. Palmer | stand-alone | After being in limbo for 13 years, Schrödinger's Frisbee has finally been released! It is a story about "a boy and his dog, his girlfriend – and alien abduction".[136] | ||
Schooled in Magic: Cordelia Cooper Book 2 | September 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | A Family of Wizards | Third book in A Family of Wizards series and the second book in the Cordelia Cooper sub-series.[137] | ||
From the Ashes of Armageddon | September 2021 | Shane Gries | Ashes Saga | Third book and final in the Ashes Saga series.[138] | ||
Paradigms Lost | October 2021 | Ryk E. Spoor | stand-alone | A expanded re-write of a previous published book.[139] | ||
Backfire | October 2021 | J. Dharma Windham | stand-alone | A mystery novel about the U.S. Navy and a mysterious top-secret U.S. government agency trying to recover a secret device that is on board a shipwreck at the bottom of the world's deepest oceanic trench.[140] | ||
Jack | October 2021 | Cecelia Holland | stand-alone | Historical fiction about a young woman named Jenny who secretly joins the Continental Army in the Summer of 1776 disguised as a young man named Jack after the British fleet showed up to disembark to large army near her family's home on Long Island.[141] | ||
Subway to the Stars | November 2021 | Nathan B. Dodge | Subway Trilogy | Alien invasion by giant space bugs via artificial wormholes! Second book of Dodge's Subway Trilogy.[142] | ||
Reluctant Goddess | November 2021 | J. Dharma Windham | The Kleopatra Chronicles | First book in The Kleopatra Chronicles. Egyptian Gods and demons walk the Earth in Macedonian Egypt. This is a story of a Ptolemaic princess who called the powers of the ancient Egyptian Gods to help her restore order in a time of chaos and destruction.[143] | ||
A Grand Imperial War | November 2021 | Ray Tabler | stand-alone | Another space opera.[144] | ||
WarSpell: The Orclands (Game of Freedom Book 1) | December 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell (Game of Freedom) | Fifth book in the WarSpell series and the first in the "Game of Freedom" sub-series.[145] | ||
The Sword and the Serpent | December 2021 | J. Dharma Windham | The Kleopatra Chronicles | Second book in The Kleopatra Chronicles. Romans get involved in the Egyptian civil war between Kleopatra's father and the usurper Queen Berenike and the Egyptian gods are not very happy.[146] | ||
Nick Klaus: A WarSpell Christmas story | December 2021 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | No ISBN | WarSpell | A free e-book in the WarSpell series. The various fictional incarnations of Santa Claus, Saint Nicholas, and their pagan predecessors merged to form the character Nick Claus while a RGP player gets merged with a toy making elf character. A Saturnalia gift from the authors to their WarSpell readers.[147] | |
No Place to Die | December 2021 | Roger Kelly Smith | stand-alone | A cold-war military science fiction thriller similar to the style of Tom Clancy or Ian Fleming in which a near-future 21st century China instead of mid-20th century Soviet Union is used as the primary military foe to the United States.[148] | ||
Phoenix Rising | January 2022 | Ryk E. Spoor | Balanced Sword | Reprint of his fantasy classic.[149] | ||
Hellflower | February 2022 | Rosemary Edghill | Hellflower series | Reprint of her out-of-print science fiction thriller from the early 1990s that was originally published under the pen name "eluki bes shahar" (lower case intentional).[150] | ||
Refinery | February 2022 | Paul Gruhn | stand-alone | A technological mystery novel about how a series of unexplained small problems that are happening to an aging refinery that is leading to a catastrophic disaster. Coincidence? Or something more sinister? No magic, monsters, space aliens, or time warps involved in this one.[151] | ||
Fool's Paradise | February 2022 | Ray Tabler | stand-alone | Another space opera.[152] | ||
WarSpell: Support Missions (Game of Freedom Book 2) | March 2022 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell (Game of Freedom) | Seventh book in the WarSpell series and the second in the "Game of Freedom" sub-series.[153] | ||
Whalesong | March 2022 | Stoney Compton | stand-alone | Fantasy story about a humpback whale and a young Eskimo who developed a mysterious psychic bond to each other.[154] An early version of this story received a favorable mention in a 1990 review of the anthology Universe 1 by The New York Times.[155] | ||
Darktraders | April 2022 | Rosemary Edghill | Hellflower series | Reprint of Edghill's long out-of-print second book in the Hellflower series from the early 1990s.[156] | ||
Time Enough 1777 | April 2022 | John Deakins | stand-alone | Novel about a time-traveler from the 21st century who get shot by his own ancestor when visiting his family's ancestral Vermont home during the War of Independence.[157] | ||
WarSpell: World Sailing (Game of Freedom Book 3) | April 2022 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell (Game of Freedom) | Eighth book in the WarSpell series and the third in the "Game of Freedom" sub-series.[158] | ||
Paradise | May 2022 | Marella Sands | Perdition | Fourth book in the Perdition series.[159] | ||
The Hadley Directive | May 2022 | J. Dharma Windham | stand-alone | One of infinite parallel universes[160] | ||
Subway to the Universe | May 2022 | Nathan B. Dodge | Subway Trilogy | The humans are winning against giant alien space bugs and owners of SSS found away to extend their portal system to include interstellar travel. Third and last book of Dodge's Subway Trilogy.[161] | ||
Russian Amerika | June 2022 | Stoney Compton | Russian Amerika series | Reprint of first book in the Russian Amerika series, an alternative history in which the Russian Empire never sold Alaska | ||
WarSpell: The Princess' Choice (Game of Freedom Book 4) | June 2022 | Gorg Huff and Paula Goodlett | WarSpell (Game of Freedom) | Ninth book in the WarSpell series and the fourth in the "Game of Freedom" sub-series.[162] | ||
Promised Land | July 2022 | Marella Sands | Perdition | Fifth book in the Perdition series. | ||
Archangel Blues | July 2022 | Rosemary Edghill | Hellflower series | Reprint of Edghill's long out-of-print third book in the Hellflower series from the early 1990s. | ||
The Hunt at Bevel Springs | August 2022 | Wayland Smith | stand-alone | Weirdness in the post-Civil War Great Plains | ||
Scepter of the Sun King | August 2022 | Steve Ruskin | Trina Piper Thrillers | Second book in the Trina Piper Thrillers series. Another mystery involving competing powers searching for the secrets hidden inside Louis XIV's missing septer. |