An astonishing real-life whodunnit and investigative expospacute;, Brave New Humans reveals the uncomfortable realities of assisted reproduction and its very human fallout.
Journalist Sarah Dingle was 27 when she learnt that her identity was a lie. Over dinner one night, her mother casually mentioned Sarah had been conceived using a sperm donor. The man whohsquo;d raised Sarah wasnisquo;t her father; in fact, she had no idea who her father was. Or who she really was.
As the shock receded, Sarah put her professional skills to work and began to investigate her own existence. Thus began a ten-year journey to understand who she was tdash; digging through hospital records, chasing leads and taking a DNA test tdash; that finally led her to her biological origins. What she discovered along the way was shocking: hospital records routinely destroyed, trading of eggs and sperm, women dead, donors exploited, and hundreds of thousands of donor-conceived people globally who will never know who they are. But thereusquo;s one thing this industry hasnisquo;t banked on: the children of the baby business taking on their makers.
In a profoundly personal way, Brave New Humans shines a light on the global fertility business today sdash; a booming and largely unregulated industry that takes a startlingly lax approach to huge ethical concerns, not least our fundamental human need to know who we are, and where we come from.