Author: Wray Miller
ISBN: 0972394818

The following review was contributed by: Paul Lappen: CLICK TO VIEW Paul Lappen's Reviews
This story is about a near-future Earth, totally changed by a new species of
algae called Cerulean Blue (years are no longer denominated in AD - Anno Domini,
but acb - after cerulean blue). Among its unique properties are the ability to
slow the aging process for any animal, including humans, that ingests it. The
algae also contains plenty of oxygen, so a person could live very easily in a
vat of it, once they get over their drowning reflex. It also puts the person to
sleep. Since Earth is on the verge of environmental collapse, a radical plan is
hatched by Reginald Erlichmann, head of the United Nations Corporation. Much of
the Earth's population will be placed in storage for 30 years, in order to give
the Earth a chance to cleanse itself. The politically correct are eager to take
part. The reality is very different.
Those who end up in a Type I facility are the genetically pure elite (sound
familiar?) who will be resurrected in the future. A Type II facility is for
those who will never be resurrected; perhaps they will be used for cloning
purposes in the future. The vast majority of the population of "the West" (Asia
and Africa pulled out of the U.N. years before) end up in a Type III facility.
Think of a Nazi concentration camp with computer-controlled lasers to do the
killing, instead of gas.
There are some who want no part of this new world; among them are neighbors
Harold Womack and Greg Baldwin, and their families. Womack's daughter, Lynn, a
scientist for UniCorp, accidentally discovers the truth, and is able to warn her
parents just before UniCorp police come for both families, and just before she
disappears. They take off to the South American jungles, where they undertake an
active rebellion, not knowing if their daughter is alive or dead.
This is an excellent piece of near-future society building. It's interesting and
plausible, it's a good story and it will give the reader plenty to consider.