You can go your whole life in the Void without trouble ever finding you.
Moss doesn't have that kind of luck.
Get Lost Saga Book 3
First, there was the stowaway, the pirate, and a centuries-old mystery drifting through the void of space.
Then, there was the robbery that became a rescue mission, and a race to escape the Silver Legion.
Now, the past is on a collision course with the present, and Maurice "Moss" Foote is stuck in the middle... again.
For Moss, nothing is ever simple, not even a day on the beach. It's not long before he and his crew are on the run from the authorities, hiding out, being double crossed, and helping clean up what should have been a simple diplomatic matter. It's only fair. He did help create the mess in the first place.
But actions have consequences, and soon the events from Lost Souls and Lost Cargo collide in the most unexpected ways.
Lives will be lost, but with luck, a future will also be found.
Read an excerpt here


Some Off-Site Reviews:
Excerpt from On Spec Magazine:
You know that feeling you get when you’ve had that perfect cup of coffee on that perfect morning? That sense of completion and being complete, of knowing your place in the world and finding contentment in that? As corny as that sounds, it was that encompassing sense of perfection and place I felt when I finished Lost Lives, the last book in Noah Chinn’s Get Lost Saga.
And those who know me as either an individual or a reviewer, will also know I’m a harsh editor and critic, have a tendency to impatience and dismissiveness when I read something I think is derivative or just lacking imagination and good writer’s craft. So, for me to write that Noah Chinn is a master of his genre and his craft, is not praise lightly given. Frankly, I’d stand him up against Robert J. Sawyer, Nalo Hopkinson, and a league of others any day.
https://onspec.ca/book-reviews-page-lorina-stephens
Excerpt from the Ottawa Review of Books:
Lost Lives is the most ‘serious’ of the [series], posing moral issues pertinent to any dystopian hellscape. There is still plenty of humour and fast action to keep one turning pages, but underneath it all is a story about humanity’s fundamental tendency to divide people into groups, and then get genocidal on each other. It is a story about choosing to remain hopeful in the face of a seemingly impossible situation and choosing to do the right thing, even when it’s hard. It is about the universal need for transparency, for the rule of law, and for heroes.
Read the full review here:
https://www.ottawareviewofbooks.com/single-post/lost-lives-by-noah-chinn
Excerpt from Amazing Stories Magazine:
What I particularly like is that the readers get to share the internal monologue of every character, their hopes and fears, their self-loathing… Why, it appears to be the case that almost everybody suffers from imposter syndrome, apart, perhaps from the megalomaniacs and psychopaths. This not only adds onion layers of complexity, but considerable entertainment value as well.
…To put it another way, the author keeps you off-kilter and guessing right to the very end, all the while spoofing the genre to the point of keeping you chuckling throughout. A satisfying read I found extremely entertaining. Highly recommended.
Read the full review here:
https://amazingstories.com/2025/11/clubhouse-review-lost-lives-space-opera-novel-by-noah-chinn/
FUN RIDE!!!!!
I will say it again, if you loved Firefly or any science fiction out there with a sense of humor, but a serious story line, you need to dive into this series!
Noah has created an unbelievably detailed, intricate universe with so much depth and detail and history, AND THAT IS JUST THE BACKGROUND! Noah’s characters are fully fleshed out and very human, even when they AREN’T human at all. And I love that he made me shudder with his descriptions of where AI and all its little babies might eventually take us… Arrrgh.
But Noah’s strength is his amazing ability to make you laugh in the midst of all the uncertainty and tension. Just wait for the chapter called “Moss and the Real Girl” – “You ever seen a newborn giraffe learn to walk?” And once again, as I have mentioned before, the mustelid comes to the rescue, sort of. (Made you look it up!) And then there’s the scapegoat joke…
As I have said before, I grew up during the Golden Age of Science Fiction and graduated to McCaffrey, Norton, Schmitz, and SO many others. My “keeper” shelf is full of these, and Bujold, of course! This book reminded me of the best of those. Exciting, suspenseful, and droll humor – authentic human beings (and other not so human beings and some beings you just aren’t sure of at the moment) in space – and HOPE in the face of adversity and what sometimes seem to be unsurmountable challenges. FUN!
And it ended TOO SOON! I really want more from Moss’s crew. I want more of this ‘verse. And, as I have said before, I want a Netflix movie or a series or something! I want MORE of the Lost ‘verse.
Thank you, Noah, for keeping me enthralled during some distracting times!
A great conclusion to a wonderful series.
If you like your space operas with a fistful of snark, a huge dollop of humour, memorable characters and alien species, adventures that often go awry, and several nods to pop culture (movie and book nerds will appreciate this), then this series is for you.
While Lost Lives does wrap up the trilogy, there’s also potential for spin-offs with various characters.
Lost Lives is coming out this month, isn’t it? Hope to find it at the Robson Indigo
Lost Lives is already out! If it’s not currently at Robson Indigo, feel free to request it!