Genre: Science Fiction
About nataliefLocation: Horsham, UK Age:42 Website: http://www.natalieford.com/ Favorite novels: The Hobbit. Hitchikers Guide to the Galaxy. Many, many more Favorite writers: Tolkien. Adams. Many, many more. Favorite music: Silence or something trip-hop/ambient/chillout. Non-noveling interests: WoW, web, photography, knitting |
Joined: Oktober 29, 2005 This Year: Official Participant NaNoWriMo History: NaNoWriMo posts: 19 NaNoWriMo buddies: 8
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Brief Author Bio: I am doing IndyWriMo (30k target) because multiple sclerosis is a full time unpaid job with a lot of compulsory unpaid overtime. The fatigue means that managing 1k per day is a miracle! |
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Synopsis: Justified Means? (working title)
(Provisional Synopsis)
Susah is a scientist of an alternate near future that was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis at age fourteen. Even now in 2148 there is no cure for this debilitating chronic illness and, by the time the story starts, she has become considerably more disabled. Earlier research into using stem cell therapy as a treatment and potential cure has continued and she becomes caught up in the seedy criminal world of stem cell piracy. She is also working on a study at the local university into eugenics and gene therapy and is wrestling with herself about the ethics involved in these complex issues.
Excerpt: Justified Means? (working title)
(Excerpt from first draft)
I take a sip of water from the tube fitted at the head of my bed. Slowly but surely I am becoming able to move as I reach for the pain medication syringe and gas-inject it into my neck. Grabbing my book from the bedside cabinet I read for a few minutes while my body gets used to the idea that the pain has gone for now before I slowly sit myself up on the bed and transfer to the wheelchair. Luckily I sleep without clothes on in these days of environmentally controlled homes and so, once I manage to get into the chair, all I need to do is to gather some clean clothes together before I make my way to the bathroom and pull myself up out of the chair using the wet-room grab bars. Once I am vertical and stable, the jets of the insta-shower can lather, wash and rinse me as I just stand there gripping the grab-bar for all I am worth. I am sure that showering used to be much more exhausting for people with multiple sclerosis back in my grandparents’ day. My great uncle Rebus had the same chronic disease and, back in those days, there was not even as many treatments as there are today. As I stand there starting to dry off as the insta-shower switches to the warm air drying jets, I am feeling immensely grateful for invention, progress and current medical understanding.
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