Having written a fair number of books, it will take a bit of time for me to get them all listed here, but what follows is a start. Until I get this more elaborate version complete, you can at least visit this alternate all-text page that lists pretty much all my titles. (Opens in a new tab.)
The books are presented with related books grouped together, and more or less in order of their publication. Most of these books have been published overseas as well. For the sake of not having this page buried in parentheses and italics, with one or two exceptions, I have generally listed only the first U.S. edition.
Allies and Aliens
My first two book, THE TORCH OF HONOR (Baen, 1985) and ROGUE POWERS (Baen, 1986) were later combined into a single omnibus edition under the title ALLIES AND ALIENS. The two books tell the story of the first interstellar war — a war interupted by the First Contact with a friendly — and very dangerous — species of aliens — who just happen to be occupying the battlefield. {Baen Books, paperback, June, 1995}.

Orphan of Creation
The bones of a australopithicine — a form of pre-human thought to be extinct for a millions — are found in Mississippi, and seem to date from the period just before the Civil War. As the evidence mounts that australopithicines are alive in the present day, a question that no one ever thought to ask before suddenly become more more urgent — what, exactly, is a human being. {Baen Books, paperback, 1988, FoxAcre Press 2002.}

Farside Cannon
Scientists working in the high arctic wastes of Iceland discover proof that an asteroid strike killed the dinosaurs. But their evidence is less than welcome to the people planning to move the asteroid Cornucopia into Earth orbit. There seems to be only one way to stop the asteroid — and the only place to do it from is the lunar Farside. {Baen Books, paperback, 1989}. This book takes place in the same universe as the Hunted Earth series, about a hundred years prior to THE RING OF CHARON.

The War Machine
(with David Drake)
The Pact, the despotic and corrupt system that has held all the worlds and star sytems together for so long, is finally starting to unravel. But as bad as it is, the chaos and upheaval that will come in the wake of the Pact’s collapse can only be worse. A young officer, his marriage wrecked for the momentary advantage of one political faction over another, is forced to do battle against a unseen enemy in the name of the Pact. {Baen Books, paperback, 1989.}

Supernova
(with Eric Kotani)
As the twentieth century draws to its close, a young scientist discovers evidence that Sirius B, one of the closest stars to Earth, is about to undergo a Supernova explosion. Indeed, it may have already exploded, with the explosion shock wave already on its way to Earth. At first, it seems just a scientific curiosity, but even from a distance of many light years, a supernova explosion can have strange — and disastrous — consequences. (Avon, 1991)

The Modular Man
In a world where the line between man and machine has become increasingly blurred, a robotic household maintenance unit is arrested for murder, and the dead man’s widow decides to defend the machine herself. For the case is not just about murder. The prosecution wants the court to rule that no machine can stand trial, because no machine has rights under the law. Except there are very good reasons to argue this one does — because the prosecution beleives the dead man is very much alive, his mind stored inside the robot. In effect, the victim has been arrested for murdering himself. {Bantam Books, paperback, 1992}.

Star Wars: The Corellian Trilogy
A word is in order here regarding a pretty good-sized elephant in the room: The events in these books do not in any way resemble, coincide, or match up with the later Stars Wars movies, TV shows, books, graphic novels, and what-have-you.
These three books were part of a detailed and internally (more or less) self-consistent continuity that was what amounted to a giant coordinated collaboration between I don’t know how many authors. All very official and all very much signed off on (and often micro-managed by) Lucasfilms et. al.
And then, in 2014, Lucasfilms said, never mind, we’re starting over. And so these books were no longer an Expanded Universe — but Star Wars Legends. What today would be called an alternate timeline. But, honest, we all worked really hard to keep our stories straight. To learn more, search on the phrase “Star Wars Legends,” and/or visit this link. (Opens in a new tab.)
Ambush At Corellia
Han Solo takes his wife, Leia Organo Solo, Chewbacca, and his three children to visit his home world of Corellia. It is supposed to be nothing more than a family vacation, with a little politicking thrown in on the side. Instead, Han and his family stumble into the middle of a dangerous rebellion — one that could cause the New Republic itself to fall. {Bantam Books, paperback, 1995}.

Assault At Selonia
Imprisoned on the planet Corellia, Han Solo finds himself at the mercy of his cousin, Thracken Sal-Solo. Thracken plans to restore the Imperial system and seize total power — no matter what the cost. Han has one chance to stop him. But to do so he must turn his back on his human cousin and join forces with a female alien. Dracmus was arrested as a ringleader in a plot against the corrupt Human League. Now she and Han will attempt a daring escape to Selonia in time to warn Leia, Luke Skywalker, and Lando of Thracken’s plan. But can Han trust the alien to keep her word?

Showdown at Centerpoint
When a loyalist ship approaching Selonia is blasted out of space, Han Solo quickly realizes that rebel forces are turning planetary repulsors into weapons of immense destruction. Meanwhile, Luke Skywalker and Lando Calrissian manage to discover the terrifying secret of Centerpoint Station. It is the infamous Starbuster itself, and its next programmed nova, hard-wired in, is set to annihilate a chosen star, its inhabited worlds, and millions of innocent lives. There’s only one way to stop it: blow up the station. But as a massive rebel fleet closes in on Centerpoint, Han, Luke, and their friends will discover time is running out.

The Caliban Trilogy
Caliban
In this first book of a three-book series of Robot mysteries, an eminent roboticist is savagely attacked — and all the evidence points to something impossible — that a robot attacked her. But Sheriff Alvar Kresh soon learns, much to his horror, that, all of a sudden, such a thing is possible — because the scientist who was attacked had made some changes in the Three Laws. {Ace Books, trade paperback, 1993}

Inferno
A political assassination throws the planet Inferno into chaos just as draconian measures to rescue the planetary climate are going into effect. But as soon becomes apparent, solving the case could easily wreck the delicate political structure of the re-terraforming project. {Ace Books, trade paperback, 1994}

Utopia
Third book in the CALIBAN triology. A young scientist proposes a daring plan to revitalize the dying world of Inferno — but the robots of Inferno are determined to prevent all risk, all danger — even if the risk might save the world.

The Chronicles of Solace
The Depths of Time
Admiral Anton Koffield discovers a dangerous if hidden flaw in the techniques then being used to terraform the planet Solace. He rushes there with a warning — but is delayed in transit for over a century, to find a world still unaware of the disaster that is about to overtake it.

The Ocean of Years
Oskar DeSilvo led the project that terraformed the planet Solace, but he’s been dead for over a hundred years — or so thought all of Settled Space. But now, as Solace slides toward ecological collapse, Anton Koffield has reason to believe DeSilvo might be living still — and might hold the secrets that could save not only Solace, but all of humanity. And Anton Koffield has his own reasons for finding DeSilvo, the man who nearly destroyed him… Thus begins a quest not only to track down DeSilvo — but to save the future from the whims of a madman.

The Shores of Tomorrow
On the verge of extinction, only the gravest imaginable crime against humanity can save it. A bold new plan seeks to ignite a new SunSpot over Greenhouse, saving the habitat domes crucial to the survival of the Solacian people. But a secret clouds this symbol of much-needed hope: human space is contracting at a startling rate, threatening to wipe out all living worlds — including Earth. But as the work begins, agents of the Chronologic Patrol step in to prevent interference with the past – even at the risk of dooming humanity. Thwarted at every turn, Anton Koffield, proposes one last wildly grandiose idea — one final, desperate gamble. But if the only choice lies between madness and certain catastrophe — is there any choice at all?
