How would you vote in the 2096 referendum?

In a future where most children are born in artificial wombs, one girl must decide if natural birth has a future.

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The Premise

Europe, 2096. Half a century after the Big Drop, the collapse of global birthrates, almost every child is now a Regular: genetically tuned, born in artificial wombs, and raised in state-run Centers designed for perfection. Those born the old way, Natural-Borns, live in their own districts, remnants of a past fading from view.

Seventeen-year-old Grace is in her final year at a Center, her days kept on track by AI-guided human caretakers. She has never questioned her place, always grateful for her perfect upbringing—until she is gifted a banned book that awakens her 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 she sees what Regulars aren’t meant to see.

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: accept the flawless future she was raised for—or fight for a life no one else believes in.

Tense, intimate, and plausibly near, Birthright asks: when technology replaces a mother’s womb, who decides how we are made? And who we become? For readers of Klara and the Sun, Handmaid’s Tale, and The School for Good Mothers.

The Protagonist

About Grace…

The people in her life: librarian, Hanah, Olga, Tom, and family, and Benjamin

The World

The country

The Center

The capital

NBD1

The minister

The technology

The Author

I write near-future novels that feel close enough to touch — stories where everyday lives collide with shifting systems and technologies. My fiction lives where heart meets mind, and where plausible what-ifs reveal timeless human truths. Each story invites you to think differently, feel deeply, and leave with at least one “I’ve never looked at it that way” moment. Berlin-based; powered by coffee. More about me here.