You Have Arrived at Your Destination

, #4

English language

Published July 29, 2020 by Independent Bookstore Day.

ISBN:
978-1-7329704-4-1
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3 stars (34 reviews)

1 edition

Review of 'You Have Arrived at Your Destination -- Private Edition' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

How much say should we have in shaping our offspring?
We are now able to tweak genes, so designer babies are an option.
But what if you could choose your child's whole life by combining genetic engineering and big data statistics?
What line is the one that is too far?

~~

our genes don’t merely express who we are. They contain all manner of talents from previous generations that we may not benefit from personally but that can be passed on to our progeny.

Review of 'You Have Arrived at Your Destination -- Private Edition' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Another novella in the Audible / Amazon Kindle "Forward" series, this one tells the story of a man who is getting the spiel from an artificial insemination tech lab. And it surely is advanced! His wife has already picked out 3 possible "futures" for their child, all of which actually weigh pretty heavy on our protagonist.

A story that was interestingly written and excellently narrated but, in the end, I have no idea what it means. It's funny - there was a point where it seemed like a perfect spot to end on a cliff hanger and I was saying "Noooo, you can't end there - I don't know what it means!" and then I was happy there was another chapter. Unfortunately, that chapter only made things more confusing! I hope someone can explain it to me some day.

So more of a 3.5 star story, but I will round …

Review of 'You Have Arrived at Your Destination -- Private Edition' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

I’m not sure what to think of the Forward Collection so far. This is the second story I’ve read from the collection, and although it was perfectly cast with David Harbour as the audiobook narrator, there wasn’t a whole lot to the story.

The narrator goes to an advanced fertility clinic that provides extrapolated dramatized versions of his potential child’s future life (warts and all), but it doesn’t go well, as you might have guessed.

The most interesting thing about this story is the idea of extrapolated futures based on genetics, but it doesn’t come to any conclusions about this development more complex than “that would be bad”, which is a song as old as science fiction.

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Subjects

  • Fiction, general
  • Fiction, science fiction, general