KarmaCorp Books in Order
Part ofDebora Geary Books in OrderThis page lists the KarmaCorp Fixers books by Debora Geary, with reading order, book summaries, series background and tips on starting her hopeful, character-driven galactic adventures.
Last updated: January 16, 2026
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Publication Order
6 books
Star Stories - Epilogues
by Debora Geary
2017
This collection of epilogues returns to the Fixers of KarmaCorp after the main novels, offering quieter final chapters. Short glimpses of Kish, Tyra and their colleagues show how missions reshaped their lives and what “happily ever after” looks like in a big, complicated galaxy.
Shaman's Curse
by Debora Geary
2017
In the KarmaCorp universe, a newly assigned shaman-class Fixer is sent into a situation that refuses to fit the manual. Faced with tangled loyalties and an unseen threat, they must decide what “greater good” means for the people standing right in front of them.
Daughter's Need
by Debora Geary
2017
Another Fixer mission pulls a woman whose life is defined by family promises into a corner of the galaxy where those vows may no longer serve. Balancing duty to her home and compassion for strangers, she has to choose which need her Talent will answer first.
Grower's Omen
by Debora Geary
2016
Tyra Lightbody, a potions expert rooted in family and tradition, is sent to an experimental-species biome where scientists are plagued by nightmares and frayed tempers. Untangling the disturbance pits her Talent, her courage and a sentient tree against an impossible choice.
Fortune's Dance
by Debora Geary
2016
A dancer-class Fixer is dispatched to a world where tensions simmer just below the surface and no one agrees on what the problem is. Using rhythm, empathy and stubborn questions, she has to coax a fractured community into moving in step again.
Destiny's Song
by Debora Geary
2015
Lakisha “Kish” Drinkwater is the best Singer in the quadrant, so babysitting an heir on a sleepy backwater planet sounds like punishment, not work. Once she arrives, nothing is simple, and Kish has to work out why the StarReaders sent her and what she is truly meant to fix.
Series background & context
KarmaCorp collects the Fixers of KarmaCorp novels, a science-fantasy sequence written as Audrey Faye. Instead of starship battles and galaxy-wide wars, these books follow a small group of highly trained “Fixers” whose job is to nudge things toward the greater good in quieter, stranger ways.
Fixers are people with unusual Talents: singers whose voices can shift emotion and energy, dancers who can move power through a crowd, potion-makers who blend science and something more, and shamans whose skills defy easy labels. They work for KarmaCorp, an organization that sends them into messy situations where politics, culture and power are out of balance and something subtle but important has gone wrong.
In Destiny’s Song, we meet Lakisha “Kish” Drinkwater, the best Singer in the quadrant, who expects high-level diplomatic work and is instead sent to an Inheritor-ruled backwater planet to “babysit” an heir. The assignment sounds simple and slightly insulting. It turns out to be neither, and Kish has to figure out what the StarReaders saw coming and what kind of change her presence is meant to spark.
Grower’s Omen follows Tyra Lightbody, a potions expert steeped in family obligations and community promises. She is dispatched to an experimental-species biome where scientists are having nightmares and throwing beakers, and a sentient tree may be at the root of the problem. The mission forces her to choose between old loyalties and the people in front of her.
Later books continue the pattern. Each one centers a different Fixer on a new assignment inside the same shared universe. Fortune’s Dance and Shaman’s Curse delve more deeply into the dancer and shaman Talents, sending their protagonists into situations where no one has a clear map of what “doing the right thing” looks like. Daughter’s Need and the Star Stories pieces wrap up the major arcs, revisiting earlier characters and showing how their choices ripple outward.
The tone is thoughtful and often quietly funny. There are space stations, alien biomes and advanced tech, but conflict tends to take the shape of ethical puzzles, clashing worldviews and personal blind spots rather than gunfights. Queer characters are part of the fabric of the cast. So are communities that feel lived in, from miners on tiny rocks to researchers who care more about their test tubes than about galactic politics.
Readers who enjoy science fiction that leans into people, relationships and questions of responsibility will find KarmaCorp a satisfying, low-explosion corner of Geary’s work. Starting with Destiny’s Song and moving through the books in order gives the clearest view of the Fixers’ world and the slow-building consequences of their interventions.
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