A country votes on banning natural birth-and one young woman stands in the crossfire.
Europe, 2096. In a society shaped by the collapse of global birthrates, almost every child is now a Regular: born in artificial wombs and brought up in state-run Centers designed for perfection. Those born the old way, Natural-Borns, live in their own districts, remnants of a past slowly fading from view.
Seventeen-year-old Grace is in her final year at a Center, her life steady, structured, and carefully guided by AI-assisted human caretakers. She has never questioned the system that raised her, grateful for the safety and certainty of a flawless upbringing-until she is gifted a banned book that awakens a longing to see beyond the Center’s walls.
On a school trip to Natural-Born District 1, she meets Tom, whose unscripted life is full of things she’s only read about: families built on warmth and choice, landscapes growing organically, futures that aren’t prewritten. Drawn to him and his different world, Grace starts bending rules-sneaking out, clashing with friends, deceiving caretakers-and begins to notice what her perfect system quietly takes away.
When a charismatic minister drives a referendum to outlaw natural birth "for the children’s sake," violence flares, and Grace and Tom’s bond collides with old wounds, a fragile new secret, and the cost of exposure. With days dwindling and the system tightening its grip, Grace must make a decision: protect the future that raised her-or risk everything for a life that no one else believes in.
Tense, intimate, and plausibly near, Birthright ultimately asks not only who gets to decide how we are made-but how much certainty we are willing to trade for choice.
Ideal for readers who enjoy reflective, character-driven fiction like Klara and the Sun, The Handmaid’s Tale, and The School for Good Mothers.
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