Note: I'd almost managed to put this book out of my mind, until the person I loaned it out to returned it a week or so ago. I've since passed it on to another friend who couldn't believe what I was telling him about it. It seriously gave me nightmares of Zombie Dogs.
I just finished the book Frozen by Larry Johnson and Scott Baldyga. An article in JEMS (Journal of EMS) magazine piqued my interest, so I ordered it that day from Amazon. I have to tell you, the first night I started reading it, it gave me nightmares. This is a true story based on Alcor, a cryonics company, based in Scottsdale, AZ. There are many who will argue that it is written by a disgruntled employee trying to get Alcor closed down, but as the author gets drawn into the cesspool that is Alcor, it reads like a bad science fiction novel. The scary part? It's all true.

It's a book that you need to read for yourself, but it is not for the sqeamish. As I read the book, the scientist in me just couldn't see how it all would work. These people are clinically dead - not just for minutes - before they start the "washout procedure", but some times for hours. Alcorians believe that when their "first life cycle ends" they can be frozen and "reanimated" (thawed out) at a time when science has caught up and has cures for all that ails them. The biggest question I was left with...what about their souls? I'm not super religious, but I do believe that our souls help to make us who we are. When the Alcorians complete their first life cycle and are frozen, what happens to their souls? Do they get frozen too, only to be reanimated in hundreds of years? Food for thought. And what about the Alcorians who opt not for the full body suspension, but the neuro only suspensions? When they are reanimated in the future, are they just going to grow a body to plunk the head on? Or are the heads just going to live in jars? More food for thought.
