Brain Freeze −321 °F
Brain Freeze −321 °F: Saving "Reggie" Sanford is a 2005 novel written by J. P. Polidoro. Hostile to cryonics, Polidoro wrote the book in Ted Williams' honor.[1] The book was published on September 13, 2005.[2]
Plot summary[править]
Reginald “Lefty” Sanford, a famed Negro Leagues baseball player and pitcher from yesteryear, dies and his remains are questionably frozen in a cryonics facility in Arizona, potentially against his “last wishes.” An employee / medical technician, Jonathan Bishop of the cryonics company, Mizaronics, is fired unexpectedly after revealing a catastrophic event that occurred during the preservation of Sanford – a breach of protocol for whole body internment. Amongst public outrage, Rachel Geary, a young newspaper reporter in Phoenix, and a well-known Black baseball biographer from Detroit, Wesley Thomas Washington, champion the effort of “freeing” Reggie Sanford from his “frozen casket of absurdity.” Ironically, Wesley Washington also elicits the advocacy of a now elderly, former Red Sox icon, Ted Williams, a national hero and friend of Sanford. Williams, is retired in Florida, but willing to assist. The unscrupulous plot involves questionable medical vivisection and desecration of cadavers - science fiction that breaches bioethical standards and state-regulated mortuary practices. Futuristic cryonicists that entice the sick and elderly into submitting their bodies to an unproven technology of internment demean traditional funeral arrangements. Their belief is a future return to life in another millennium – a world where cloning and nanotechnology will cure all diseases that killed them. Industrial terrorism leads to sabotage and the theft of a critical biological sample. Jonathan Bishop goes public, having stolen confidential records and photos related to Sanford. The abduction of a key character in the book elicits a love story of incredible devotion, akin to Shakespeare’s, Romeo and Juliet. “Reggie” Sanford becomes a pawn in the rapid-paced “chiller” that leaves the reader questioning the validity of what is medically defined as, life and death, versus the definition that futurists have placed their bets on – a state of limbo where the immortality of Man is the inevitable future. The action-packed mystery “chiller” questions who legally controls ones’ remains after death. The non-validated cryonics myth and deception is currently in use today, albeit denounced by modern medical researchers, cryobiology experts and peer-reviewed scientific thought. Sadly, the U.S. and State governments have done nothing to formally denounce the sanctimonious charade.[2]
Sources[править]
- ↑ Why Ted Williams is a McCain campaign issue. J. P. Polidoro. January 21, 2008
- ↑ 2,0 2,1 BRAIN FREEZE - 321 °F. Xlibris
External links[править]
- Amazon: Brain Freeze - 321 F
- Goodreads: Brain Freeze - 321 °F : Saving Reggie Sanford