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In the year 2050, Nayhoom Waddell and Naomi Pendergrass are confronted with end of life issues, meaning the possible, absolute end of human life, maybe even all of life. But their main concerns are with themselves and their unborn child and staying alive. Global warming has become more than a possibility, it is taking place worldwide and people are struggling to survive. The insane climate is not as much an issue as the fact that in the United States the population is dividing into two predominant groups, known widely as The Haves and The Have-Nots. The have-nots have come to be called…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
In the year 2050, Nayhoom Waddell and Naomi Pendergrass are confronted with end of life issues, meaning the possible, absolute end of human life, maybe even all of life. But their main concerns are with themselves and their unborn child and staying alive. Global warming has become more than a possibility, it is taking place worldwide and people are struggling to survive. The insane climate is not as much an issue as the fact that in the United States the population is dividing into two predominant groups, known widely as The Haves and The Have-Nots. The have-nots have come to be called hooligans. The Haves are in general, people who are not hooligans. Strife is common, and the acknowledged way of life for everyone. Nayhoom and Naomi, after being married, eventually have to run for their lives and find a place to hide and birth their baby away from the anarchy and human turmoil taking place all around them. How and where they go, what they think, and what transpires there, indicates clearly the need of a new paradigm understanding of reality for humankind.
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Autorenporträt
John Chapman was born in Birmingham, England in 1935 and grew up mainly in Gloucestershire. He attended Southampton University and gained an honours degree in mathematics with aeronautics; but was seduced by the emerging computer technology. After a spell in Northern Ireland he moved to Toronto where he worked for Ferranti-Packard with some of the brightest brains of the period and developed techniques for digitising oil-well logs to release fifty year old data to computer technology. After spells in Australia, Scotland and Sweden he returned to England in 1970 to work for ICL, having married Ann in 1966 and having three children. Here he continued to travel the world advising many institutions on how best to exploit the new technologies before retiring in 1992. He became a school inspector, served for nearly fifty years as a local councillor and became deeply immersed in local and military history being either the author or co-author of many books. He was also a leader in helping others, being the chairman of his local voluntary society for many years.