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Books | Fiction / General
3.3
(273)
Michael Crichton
Is a loved one missing some body parts? Are blondes becoming extinct? Is everyone at your dinner table of the same species? Humans and chimpanzees differ in only 400 genes; is that why a chimp fetus resembles a human being? And should that worry us? There's a new genetic cure for drug addiction—is it worse than the disease? We live in a time of momentous scientific leaps, a time when it's possible to sell our eggs and sperm online for thousands of dollars and to test our spouses for genetic maladies. We live in a time when one fifth of all our genes are owned by someone else, and an unsuspecting person and his family can be pursued cross-country because they happen to have certain valuable genes within their chromosomes . . . Devilishly clever, Next blends fact and fiction into a breathless tale of a new world where nothing is what it seems and a set of new possibilities can open at every turn. Next challenges our sense of reality and notions of morality. Balancing the comic and the bizarre with the genuinely frightening and disturbing, Next shatters our assumptions and reveals shocking new choices where we least expect. The future is closer than you think.
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More Details:
Author
Michael Crichton
Pages
448
Publisher
Harper Collins
Published Date
2006-11-28
ISBN
0060872985 9780060872984
Ratings
Google: 3.5
Community ReviewsSee all
"I have to start allowing myself to put a book down and not feel compelled to finish it just because I started it. This would have been a good one to begin with! Too many characters, didn't connect with any of them, just didn't like it."
L
Lauren
"The amount of characters portrayed in the book made it difficult to follow sometimes, as a character would show up in one chapter and not be addressed again for quite some time. However, the well established characters were engaging and the storyline was quite different from other books of the genre. If the science aspects of the book are based in real science, it was quite informative. The author does a pretty decent job of making the complicated seem straight forward, while keeping the reader interested."
G T
Gray Tischler