Set in a near-future America shaped by rising authoritarian control and biomedical innovation, In Vitro follows the story of women whose bodies become battlegrounds between technology, politics, and autonomy. The novel explores reproductive rights, the ethics of artificial life, and the struggle to preserve humanity in an increasingly mechanized world.
In Vitro blurs the line between body and machine, posing the question of how far society will go to engineer perfection. What does it mean to remain human in a time of unchecked technological development? Rooted in the landscapes and history of the American Southwest, In Vitro reimagines the futures of women navigating power, technology, and survival. The book envisions what it means to reclaim one's identity agency in a world of chaos.
In Vitro rips through the literary world with the breakout science fiction novel from poet and best-seller Lourdes Leiner. Between the contrasts of these worlds, creates grounds for conversations on developing techologies in the literary arts. And poses a request for the literary arts to ground communities in a truthful narratve in the age of aapidly developing technologies, that cause ripples in human discernment and the psyche.