When a new crop pathogen begins tearing through commercial corn across Iowa, most counties wait for federal guidance.
Harlan County doesn't.
Claire Foster, the local extension agent, watches neighboring farms lose entire fields to a fast-moving fungal strain that thrives in genetically uniform hybrid crops. The supply chain that once promised stability now reveals its fragility. Seed companies offer reassurances. Regulators urge patience. But planting season is closing fast.
Instead of waiting, Claire turns to something most of modern agriculture left behind: heritage seeds.
With the help of an aging farmer who has saved open-pollinated varieties for fifty years, a skeptical mayor, and a former corporate agronomist who walked away from the system, Claire builds a community seed library in a church fellowship hall. Farmers relearn how to save seeds. Neighbors share varieties their grandparents once grew. Knowledge moves from generation to generation-just in time.
But as commercial crops begin to fail in Harlan County, outside interest follows. A powerful seed corporation sees opportunity in crisis. Regulators start asking questions. And Claire must decide whether resilience can remain in community hands-or whether it will be absorbed back into the very system that failed.
The Seed Vault is a grounded, clean speculative drama about food security, agricultural resilience, and the quiet power of local action when centralized systems begin to crack.
For readers who appreciate:
Real-world science grounded in plausible agriculture
Community-driven problem solving
Institutional tension without dystopian excess
Rural settings with modern stakes
This is not a post-apocalyptic thriller.
It is a story about what happens before collapse-when people still have a chance to choose differently.