Sea Change
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- $4.99
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- $4.99
Publisher Description
New from the Nebula Award winning author of Beggars in Spain, a riveting climate-change technothriller of espionage, conspiracy, and stakes so high they could lead to the destruction of humanity itself.
“Kress wisely keeps her global catastrophe on a human scale, eschewing superheroic action for tense realism. This urgent, deeply satisfying story is as tenacious and inspiring as its heroine.”—Publishers Weekly
Operative Renata Black has an unusual problem: an ordinary self-driving house. But this particular house, which is causing a traffic snarl, also has the Org’s teal paint on the windowsill.
In 2022, GMOs were banned. A biopharmaceutical drug caused the Catastrophe: worldwide economic and agricultural collapse, and personal tragedy for lawyer Caroline Denton and her son. Ten years later, as Renata Black, she is a member of the Org, an underground group of scientists hunted by the feds. But the Org’s illegal research might just hold the key to rebuilding the worlds’ food supply.
Now there’s a mole in the Org, and Renata is the only one who can find out who it is. Will there be time to reveal the solutions that the world has not been willing to face?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
This quietly revelatory bio-thriller from Nebula Award winner Kress (Beggars in Spain) follows one woman's moral persistence in the face of a near-future worldwide emergency. Following a nationwide biochemical contamination and a major financial crisis, Luddite panic sweeps America, resulting in a ban on all GMO products and research. Now, in 2032, humanity is facing famine caused by global warming, making it vital to find ways to adapt plants to new growing conditions, despite such experiments being outlawed. Caroline Denton has always fought for humanity's survival, and after Domoic acid released by an immense oceanic algae bloom kills her son Ian, she commits even more fiercely to aiding in top secret GMO research. As a courier for the Org, an underground group of scientists developing better food plants, Caroline passes communications between a network of small, clandestine research facilities until raids by law enforcement make it clear that the Org has a mole in its midst. Kress wisely keeps her global catastrophe on a human scale, eschewing superheroic action for tense realism. This urgent, deeply satisfying story is as tenacious and inspiring as its heroine.