𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

πŸ“

The Lost Family: How DNA Testing Is Upending Who We Are

✍ Scribed by Libby Copeland


Publisher
Abrams
Year
2020
Tongue
English
Leaves
304
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


A deeply reported look at the rise of home genetic testing and the seismic shock it has had on individual lives

You swab your cheek or spit into a vial, then send it away to a lab somewhere. Weeks later you get a report that might tell you where your ancestors came from or if you carry certain genetic risks. Or the report could reveal a long-buried family secret and upend your entire sense of identity. Soon a lark becomes an obsession, an incessant desire to find answers to questions at the core of your being, like "Who am I?" and "Where did I come from?" Welcome to the age of home genetic testing.

In The Lost Family, journalist Libby Copeland investigates what happens when we embark on a vast social experiment with little understanding of the ramifications. Copeland explores the culture of genealogy buffs, the science of DNA, and the business of companies like Ancestry and 23andMe, all while tracing the story of one woman, her unusual results, and a relentless methodical drive for answers that becomes a thoroughly modern genetic detective story.

The Lost Family delves into the many lives that have been irrevocably changed by home DNA testsβ€”a technology that represents the end of family secrets. There are the adoptees who've used the tests to find their birth parents; donor-conceived adults who suddenly discover they have more than fifty siblings; hundreds of thousands of Americans who discover their fathers aren't biologically related to them, a phenomenon so common it is known as a "non-paternity event"; and individuals who are left to grapple with their conceptions of race and ethnicity when their true ancestral histories are discovered. Throughout these accounts, Copeland explores the impulse toward genetic essentialism and raises the question of how much our genes should get to tell us about who we are. With more than thirty million people having undergone home DNA testing, the answer to that question is more important than ever.

Gripping and masterfully told, The Lost Family is a spectacular book on a big, timely subject.


πŸ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


The Genomics Age: How DNA Technology Is
✍ Gina Smith πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2004 πŸ› AMACOM 🌐 English

I am biotechnology professor in Hong Kong teaching Chinese students and writing books for beginners and students myself. So I can truly appreciate Gina Smith' s book. I cannot agree at all with some negative reviews here. The book is a magnificient opus and badly needed, especially for the often il

The Genomics Age How DNA Technology Is T
✍ Gina Smith πŸ“‚ Library 🌐 English

In the history of mankind, few scientific phenomena have so profoundly changed the human experience as will the revolution in the use of DNA technology. Entertaining, informative, and written in plain English, The Genomics Age explores how recent leaps in the understanding of DNA offer astounding sc

The Genomics Age: How DNA Technology Is
✍ Gina Smith πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2004 πŸ› AMACOM 🌐 German

In the history of mankind, few scientific phenomena have so profoundly changed the human experience as will the revolution in the use of DNA technology. Entertaining, informative, and written in plain English, The Genomics Age explores how recent leaps in the understanding of DNA offer astounding sc

Blueprint: How DNA Makes Us Who We Are
✍ Robert Plomin πŸ“‚ Library πŸ“… 2018 πŸ› MIT Press 🌐 English

<p><b>A top behavioral geneticist makes the case that DNA inherited from our parents at the moment of conception can predict our psychological strengths and weaknesses.</b></p><p>In <i>Blueprint</i>, behavioral geneticist Robert Plomin describes how the DNA revolution has made DNA personal by giving