Two brothers find themselves on opposite sides of a controversial genetic breakthrough. (Dec.)
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The Immortality Factor
Narrated by Paul Boehmer, Holly Hawkins, Judy Young, Rosalyn Landor, Scott Peterson, Stefan Rudnicki
Ben BovaUnabridged — 17 hours, 5 minutes
![The Immortality Factor](http://img.images-bn.com/static/redesign/srcs/images/grey-box.png?v11.9.4)
The Immortality Factor
Narrated by Paul Boehmer, Holly Hawkins, Judy Young, Rosalyn Landor, Scott Peterson, Stefan Rudnicki
Ben BovaUnabridged — 17 hours, 5 minutes
Overview
In this provocative, gripping, and startling novel, bestselling author Ben Bova delivers a knockout read with his trademark blend of cutting-edge science and unrelenting suspense.
Some see stem-cell research as mankind's greatest scientific breakthrough; others, a blasphemous attempt to play God. Suddenly, the possibility of immortality exists. Two brothers, both doctors, stand on opposite sides of the controversy. To Arthur Marshak, his work is a momentous gift to humanity. To Jesse Marshak, it is a curse. And between them stands a beautiful, remarkable woman that both brothers will do anything to save.
Somehow, before it's too late, Arthur and Jesse must bridge the gap that divides them...on an issue that could mean nothing less than life or death for millions.
Editorial Reviews
Bova's cautionary medical thriller, the uncut version of his 1996 novel Brothers, explores the political, social and religious ramifications of what could be humankind's greatest medical breakthrough-organ regeneration. When biotech lab director Arthur Marshak discovers a way to grow replacement organs and limbs within a patient's own body, the uproar from religious extremists, conservative politicians and sensationalized media coverage threatens to derail the project. When Marshak decides to let a "science court" in Washington, D.C., rule on the validity of human organ regeneration, the subsequent travesty of a tribunal not only imperils his career but also his tempestuous relationship with his estranged brother, who happens to be married to Arthur's ex-fiancée. Even an implausible love triangle and a cast of two-dimensional characters can't dim the forcefulness of Bova's message: the singular significance of science in modern-day society. (Apr.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.What if, instead of being transplanted, hearts, livers, and kidneys could simply be regrown like a lizard's tail? This turns out to be a faint possibility in Arthur Marshak's genetic lab. He encourages his research staff to pursue it, but political and corporate threats loom in addition to the scientific problems. Even his brother, Jessie, a renowned physician, turns against him, leaving Julia, the love of both their lives, caught in between. By weaving flashbacks from a scientific inquiry into the ethical and medical questions of rejection, Bova (Deathdream, LJ 8/94) adds the tension of courtroom drama to a medical thriller. This novel will please Bova fans and bring him new ones.-Ann F. Donovan, Clearwater P.L., Fla.
A biotechnical breakthrough throws two brothers into conflict in this high-tech thriller set in a "science court" in the nation's capital.
Bova is best known for science fiction (Orion Among the Stars, 1995, etc.) that displays an unusual awareness of the role of politics in the scientific process. Here, he adapts that awareness to his second contemporary suspenser (after Death Dream, 1994), this involving one Arthur Marschak, head of Grenford biotechnical lab, where a genetic technique for allowing the body to regenerate injured or diseased organs has been discovered. Grenford has become the target of fundamentalist protestors, who believe that Arthur's breakthrough would disrupt God's plan; at the same time, Arthur's brother Jesse, a surgeon who has won humanitarian awards for his work among the poor in a Bronx hospital, opposes the life-extending treatment on the grounds that only the very rich will be able to afford it. The conflict is exacerbated by the fact that Jesse's wife, Julia, broke an engagement to Arthur to marry the doctor; and by Jesse's workaholic neglect of their dying mother. Meanwhile, the corporate ownership of Grenford is trying to fight a hostile takeover and is considering selling off the lab as a means of raising money, while at the same time Arthur convinces friends in Washington to convene a science court where the merits of his technique can be decided from scientific evidence alone. (Much of the novel consists of sensational testimony that, to Arthur's disgust, has nothing to do with the issues.) In the end, the good scientists win a victory of sorts, and the brothers achieve a reconciliationhardly a surprise, but there's plenty of excitement along the way.
An effective mix of science, politics, and family struggle in a novel that should reach a wide audience.
Product Details
BN ID: | 2940169690231 |
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Publisher: | Blackstone Audio, Inc. |
Publication date: | 08/01/2011 |
Edition description: | Unabridged |
Read an Excerpt
The Immortality Factor
By Bova, Ben
Tor Science Fiction
Copyright © 2009 Bova, BenAll right reserved.
ISBN: 9780765344366
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