Hidden Genes

This is a small landing page for my 2020 book. It has been said when climbing mount Everest, the last hundred yards are the hardest. This is certainly true for writing a book as well. The longer it takes, the more difficult it becomes. The last meters are the worst. If you want it to be good, you have to read and proofread your own text over and over again until you cannot see it anymore and then still 10 times more.

But here it is, my new book named “Hidden Genes”, written in the last months of the global Coronavirus pandemic. I have sent a proposal to over 30 publishers, but almost all of them rejected the proposal. Therefore I have decided to publish it myself, using a self-publishing service. If you are an old-fashioned book lover like me, you can buy it here in the epubli shop or here at Amazon in Europe. I hope you will find it interesting, and most typos should hopefully be eliminated now.

If you prefer to read the online version, you can download the PDF version of the book for FREE HERE. A larger laptop or desktop screen is recommended to read it. It has 264 pages and about 30 graphics. Product details:

Title: Hidden Genes
Author: Jochen Fromm
Publisher: epubli
Year: 2020
Pages: 264
ISBN: 375298600X
      

The book is a bit of an adventure: to see if we can study things that can not be studied, if we can measure effects that can not be measured. Arthur C. Clarke said “the only way of discovering the limits of the possible is to venture a little way past them into the impossible”. In my opinion the journey in this case was a bit bumpy, but eventually successful. The text contains in fact new, groundbreaking insights which you can read in this form nowhere else.

Are there any “hidden genes” in our world as the title suggests? Where are they hidden? And how do they work? The thesis of the book is that there are hidden genes that have not been recognized so far as what they are – genes that have the ability to create organisms if they are expressed regularly. They look different than classic DNA, but work in exactly the same way. The book shows where these hidden genes are exactly and how they are expressed (how often, by whom, and where), argues why this can go wrong, and explains what the result looks like. I hope it may help to inspire others on their journey to new insights.

Jochen Fromm, Berlin, 2020
Read more about the history of the book in the CAS-Group blog and follow me on Twitter for updates and latest news.

(DNA picture and Lightbulb picture are from Pixaybay user qimono)