Climate fiction without apocalypse, centered around Washington, DC. Electrical engineering professor Jake Harper maintains his laser focus on the repair and re-engineering of the North American electric grids. Abbey London is the junior partner in an infectious disease practice, with principle interest and expertise. in novel vector-borne disorders. Together they operate Dragonfly Inn in nearby Virginia and care for their infant daughter with support from an au pair. Jake identifies evidence of a possible kinetic attack on the grid from photographs taken by his students, while Abbey discovers yet again an infection never before encountered in this hemisphere.
Autorentext
Born in Minnesota, I grew up in Missouri, then at eighteen realized my California dream with undergraduate years at Stanford, including two years on the tennis team. After med school back in my home state, I completed a residency at UC San Francisco, during which I gave my first public lecture, a talk on nuclear power. Two weeks later I started teaching full-time in a UC Davis-affiliated family medicine residency, with much of my practice focused on obstetrics but also HIV care starting in early 1983. Taught full-time for sixteen years, with my main academic ap-pointment at the public university, but coming full circle, a community faculty appointment at Stanford Med Center as well, since I taught a number of their PA students. I lost my heart in San Francisco, and my wife became a certified nurse-midwife and between the two of us we delivered thousands of ba-bies and had three of our own, all graduated, married and two of them with a couple of grandsons apiece. We moved up to Bellingham almost thirty years ago, and are now both retired. Over the last dozen years, I have continued to lecture widely, including several seminar series at Western Washington University, plus many other venues including a couple of out-of-state conferences. But I no longer teach medicine, ra-ther about the climate system, energy systems, epidemiology, and the electric grid, and this set of fourteen or so lectures form the basis for many of the chapters in all three books.Our biggest climate-related trip was in Europe in 2015, which includ-ed biking in Berlin, Copenhagen, and Oslo, then a two-week cruise from Svalbard to Greenland and Iceland. We accomplished hiking, kayaking, and a true polar plunge well north of the Arctic Circle while in Green-land. Additionally, we explored some of the eastern Canadian maritime islands in 2023. I plan to attend a geothermal conference in El Salvador on our calendar is the last month of 2024. Puerto Rico, after a covid de-lay, will be a destination in 2025.