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        1.  

          Are identical twins the key to embryo space colonization?

          also posted to
          • mattbrowne
          3 posts, latest post: mattbrowne, Oct 5, 2008
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          1. mattbrowne
            Sep 14, 2008
            mattbrowne says:

            I've written and published a science fiction novel based on the concept of embryo space colonization. The title is 'The Future Happens Twice'. Here's the press release:

             For decades scientists have dreamed of sending deep-frozen humans on interstellar missions. But until this dream comes true, they must settle for a much simpler technique available: the freezing of human embryos. However, long distance space travel of this nature poses other challenges, none more so than the management of artificial pregnancies and how to raise the children produced.

            One viable solution comes in the form of advanced biotechnology and highly sophisticated androids, and a large scale project has been implemented to explore these options. To prove that it can really work, the project's scientists go a step further. Somewhere in the Nevada desert and well hidden underground, they conduct an eighteen-year-long experiment using a young starship crew unaware of their true environment. Surrounded by complex simulations, the crew believes they are approaching a distant star system, one that appears to host a planet suitable for human colonization. What they also don't know is the fact that their embryos had been split prior to the implantation in the womb devices.

            The scientists' bold plan is to send the twin embryos on the real mission, pioneering the frontier of space. From both identical genes and an identical environment inside the starship, they arrive at the assumption that the future is a mere repetition of the present events. And indeed, about 42,000 years later the twins grow up with the very same android parents.

            But then things start to drift away from the original plan. The real starship crew now faces a constant battle for survival. Only their fortitude and strong determination to land on the extrasolar planet averts a disaster. The reward is the new exotic world that awaits them, full of overwhelming potential.

            Matt Browne's beautifully worked space epic explores the bounds of human hope and invention and plumbs the depths of human duplicity. Tender relationships between the budding astronauts are pitched against the disillusion they feel when an embattled President confronts them with their true origins and purpose, only to reveal the real culprit in the entire project - something closer to all of us today.

            The author's fascination with the fields of bioengineering and information technology sustains the reader's interest all the way in this futuristic roller-coaster ride. And he asks a terrifying question. Setting aside man's inhumanity to man, what if Nature herself turns against us?

            This gripping novel of epic proportions skillfully mixes elements of drama, medical thriller and science fiction. As the story unfolds, Matt Browne takes his readers on a breathtaking journey through vast stretches of time and space.

            The novel's website is

            www.meet-matt-browne.com

            The Amazon link is

            www.amazon.com/Future-Happens-Twice-Perennial-Project/dp/184401830X/

            1. skud Metaweb Staff
              Sep 14, 2008
              skud says:
              Hi Matt, and thanks for joining Freebase.  If you'd like to promote your book here, the right way to do it is add a "Topic about me" to your user profile, then add the "Author" type to your topic, then put information about your book there.
            2. mattbrowne
              Oct 5, 2008
              mattbrowne says:

              Thanks for the advice!

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