Interstellar Refugees Omnibus

A First Contact Trilogy

Fiction - Science Fiction
Kindle Edition
Reviewed on 06/01/2026
Buy on Amazon

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    Book Review

Reviewed by Christian Sia for Readers' Favorite

Daniel Ellrick's Interstellar Refugees Omnibus combines the three books in the trilogy into one. It follows poker-playing telescope jockey, Miharu Nakayama, who is thrust into a role she never imagined, becoming one of the most important people in the solar system. An arkship delivers 500,000 refugees from Trappist-1, and Miharu becomes the diplomat navigating a world filled with danger. In Dialing Earth, Miharu is living a quiet life when Dr. Aiko Trapp assigns her to manage the crisis, with the simple words, “You cried for them.” Rogue homeland security agents are after her, as she races to stop xenophobia while learning the difficult art of high-stakes diplomacy. In Acting Human, the threat deepens with assassins, a businessman with his own agenda, and an ambitious mayor. Finding Friends delivers an exhilarating climax that presents Miharu with an even more complicated challenge as the arkship nears Earth.

Interstellar Refugees Omnibus is a thrilling science fiction trilogy that kept me racing from book to book. This omnibus is heart-pounding, and the author creates a compelling heroine in Miharu Nakayama. She is intelligent, humane, and resilient. She is the character who always finds a way out of any tight situation, and I loved to watch as she learned diplomacy on the job, facing challenges head-on as they came. This book does not present contact between humans and aliens as one of invasion, but explores the deeply human and bureaucratic challenges of welcoming strangers from another planet. Daniel Ellrick plots with ingenuity and delivers plot points that move the story steadily forward. The integration of AI and other species into the story, and the unique take on an existential crisis, made this a must-read. The balance between genuine human issues and orbital mechanics is exceptional.

Pikasho Deka

Interstellar Refugees Omnibus features all three books of the First Contact Trilogy by Daniel Ellrick in a single volume. Miharu Nakamaya is a bright young astronomer at the W.M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii. Miharu's humdrum life turns upside down when she unexpectedly finds herself becoming an interstellar ambassador responsible for negotiating the settlement of 500,000 alien Teewuns on Earth. The Teewuns, led by Captain Chelya, have been travelling on their massive spaceship Kizunor for almost a millennium after their homeworld became uninhabitable. But not everyone on Earth is ready to offer them sanctuary. While Homeland Security goes after Miharu, three separate countries agree to provide land for the Teewuns' settlement. Meanwhile, other nefarious factions send assassins to eliminate Miharu and a spaceship to destroy the Kizunor. Can Miharu and her allies prevail?

Interstellar Refugees Omnibus is an epic sci-fi trilogy. Daniel Ellrick draws inspiration from real-world geopolitics and social issues to craft an absorbing tale about first contact with aliens. How will humanity react if suddenly hundreds of thousands of aliens from another star system seek refuge here on Earth? This book answers that question. I liked how Ellrick explores how different countries might react to a situation like that. The narrative is realistic, all the while having an underlying theme of hope that will leave you with a smile. I also enjoyed how near-future technologies have been depicted in this novel. Whether it's sentient AIs like Addy or the fusion reactor technology, everything seems futuristic. Yet you feel humanity will most probably achieve such technology in the upcoming century or even decades. I had a blast with this book, and I think other sci-fi readers will feel the same.

Asher Syed

Daniel Ellrick's Interstellar Refugees Omnibus is a trilogy comprising Dialing Earth, Acting Human, and Finding Friends. Astronomer Miharu Nakayama expects her future to remain tied to telescope research at the W. M. Keck Observatory in Hawaii until secret contact with the arkship Kizunor places her at the center of humanity’s first permanent relationship with another civilization. The arrival brings the Teewuns to Earth after centuries spent crossing interstellar space, while Dr. Aiko Trapp forces the world to confront the existence of sentient artificial intelligence. As Miharu rises from an isolated researcher to an architect of a first coexistence, she becomes responsible for guiding humanity through a historic transition that will determine how humans, AI, and alien refugees build a shared future on Earth and beyond it. While political leaders attempt to direct that future toward their own vision, Miharu faces mounting pressure to hold together a fragile transition that could redefine civilization for generations.

Daniel Ellrick treats Interstellar Refugees Omnibus as a study of public adjustment after contact with another civilization. He keeps all three novels attentive to practical consequences through nearly every major development. I love Miharu Nakayama, a smart and capable female lead who never functions as just a symbolic scientist, and Ellrick certainly does not give her an easy time. She is up against assassination attempts and yet continues preparing a president for the possibility that Earth may enter into open conflict with the arriving Teewuns if negotiations aboard the Kizunor collapse. From the alien angle, Captain Chelya is a brilliant alternative point of view character. Also forced into tough decisions, he's faced with survival aboard a failing refugee vessel, where rationing means choosing how long an entire people can continue existing in space. The book’s sharpest adversary comes through organized panic shaped into military policy as the Chinese spacecraft Necessity approaches the Kizunor while astronaut Zhu Limei recognizes the human cost attached to her mission. Readers interested in politically grounded first contact fiction should add it to the top of their to-be-read stack. Very highly recommended.