Title: Nobody’s Baby
Series: Dorothy Gentleman, #2
Author: Olivia Waite
Publisher: Tor Books
Publication date: March 10, 2026
Length: 144 pages
Genre: Science fiction
Source: Library
Rating:
Becky Chambers meets Miss Marple in the second entry of this cozy sci-fi mystery series, helmed by a formidable no-nonsense auntie of a detective
Welcome to the HMS Fairweather, Her Majesty’s most luxurious interstellar passenger liner! Room and board are included, new bodies are graciously provided upon request, and should you desire a rest between lifetimes, your mind shall be most carefully preserved in glass in the Library, shielded from every danger.
A wild baby appears! Dorothy Gentleman, ship detective, is put to the test once again when an infant is mysteriously left on her nephew’s doorstep. Fertility is supposed to be on pause during the Fairweather’s journey across the stars—but humans have a way of breaking any rule you set them. Who produced this child, and why did they then abandon him? And as her nephew and his partner get more and more attached, how can Dorothy prevent her colleague and rival detective, Leloup, a stickler for law and order, from classifying the baby as a stowaway or a piece of luggage?
Told through Dorothy’s delightfully shrewd POV, this novella series is an ode to the cozy mystery taken to the stars with a fresh new sci-fi take. Perfect for fans of the plot-twisty narratives of Dorothy Sayers and Ann Leckie, this well-paced story will leave readers captivated and hungry for the next installment.
Dorothy Gentleman is back! In the second installment in this delightful sci-fi/mystery novella series, our favorite spacefaring detective has another doozy of a case to solve.
The HMS Fairweather is a generation ship, currently 300 years into a millennium-long journey to a new planet. Passengers essentially live forever by preserving their minds in the ship library’s memory books, then downloading themselves back into new bodies when their current bodies wear out. Carrying 10,000 people, the ship is comfortable and well-provisioned, but can’t accommodate population growth, so reproductive abilities are put on hold for the duration of the journey.
Imagine everyone’s surprise when a baby — a real, human baby! — is left on Dorothy’s nephew’s doorstep. He and his husband are instantly smitten, but Dorothy knows there’s something serious afoot. How is a baby even possible? Who abandoned it and why? And who’s been taking care of it so far?
Her sleuthing leads her to the biological parents, who are just as confused as everyone else and have no memories of where this baby came from. Meanwhile, after a thwarted kidnapping attempt, Dorothy’s nephew wants custody — but there’s the legal conundrum of whether the baby is to be considered a legitimate passenger on the ship, entitled to memory preservation and bodily renewal, or if (because he’s not on the official passenger manifest) he’s a stowaway, with no rights beyond the length of a normal mortal life.
The mystery is a fun, not terribly serious tangle of people, technology, and motives which Dorothy unravels with style. Meanwhile, life on the Fairweather is a strange mix of advanced tech — memory books and journeying through the stars — and low tech even by our standards: There don’t appear to be computers, much less smart phones — everyone is always shuffling paperwork… as in, literally piles of paper!
I love the noir vibes that the writing gives off — basically, a noir detective story in space! The writing captures the tone perfectly:
I […] opened the door — only to find Violet St. Owen there on the threshold, looking like all my weaknesses made flesh.
I mean, doesn’t that just practically scream “and then this dame walked into my office…”?
I really enjoy the world of these novellas and the details of life aboard ship. As the 2nd in a series, Nobody’s Baby doesn’t offer quite the same level of delightful discovery as the first novella, Murder by Memory, but it’s still fun to revisit the characters and setting. I did feel a bit let down by the solution to the baby’s origin, which seemed not all that consequential in the end after quite a big build-up, but otherwise found the clues and legal wrangling to be highly amusing.
Overall, Nobody’s Baby is a nice, short treat. At novella length, it’s a quick, all-in-one-sitting sort of read, and offers great entertainment throughout. I enjoyed this newest adventure with Dorothy, and hope there are plenty more to come!
Purchase links: Amazon – Audible – Bookshop.org – Libro.fm
Disclaimer: When you make a purchase through one of these affiliate links, I may earn a small commission, at no additional cost to you.


This sounds like a lot of fun! I’m always intrigued when genres blend, and the idea of cozy mystery/sci-fi seems pretty entertaining!