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Transhuman

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A scientific thriller by six-time Hugo Award winner Ben Bova

Luke Abramson, a brilliant cellular biologist who is battling lung cancer, has one joy in life: his ten-year-old granddaughter, Angela. When Angela is diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor and given less than six months to live, Luke wants to try a new enzyme, Mortality Factor 4 (MORF4), that he believes will kill Angela's tumor.

However, the hospital bureaucracy won't let him do it because MORF4 has not yet been approved by the FDA. Knowing Angela will die before he can get the treatment approved, Luke abducts her from the hospital with plans to take her to a private research laboratory in Oregon.

But Luke is too old and worn-down to flee across the country with his sick granddaughter, especially with the FBI on their trail. So he injects himself with a genetic factor that stimulates his body's production of telomerase, an enzyme that has successfully reversed aging in animal tests.

As the chase weaves across the country from one research facility to another, Luke begins to grow physically younger, stronger. He looks and feels the way he did thirty or forty years ago. Yet his lung cancer is not abating; if anything the tumors are growing faster.

And Angela is dying.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Popular science-fiction writer and social commentator Ben Bova's meditation on new life-extending technologies is engaging, and Stefan Rudnicki's deep, rich voice adds resonance to the story. Bova's unlikely heroes cross the United States in search of sanctuary, pursued by sinister government and corporate agents. Although Rudnicki is one of the great dramatic narrators of audiobooks, even he has difficulty with some of Bova's less inspired dialogue. His tough-guy voices, in particular, lack authenticity. Still, he has an extraordinary power to evoke emotion and reflection. These qualities make him a good narrator for this book. F.C. © AudioFile 2014, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 3, 2014
      Iconoclastic cellular biologist Luke Abramson is determined to save his dying eight-year-old granddaughter, Angela, with his cutting-edge treatment for cancer. Inconveniently, his process is not yet approved for use on humans, and he’s stymied by the objections of Angela’s parents. When Luke and Angela vanish, FBI special agent Jerry Hightower is assigned to recover them. While Luke’s allies are manipulating him to gain control of his revolutionary treatments and the profit they promise, his enemies will go to great lengths to keep the life-extension genie in its bottle. Luke has more immediate concerns: the side effects of the treatments that he has inflicted on himself and his helpless granddaughter are progressive and potentially lethal. Characters struggle to escape cliché (Angela’s mother “screeched” and “bleated” upon discovering the kidnapping, and Native American Hightower is “unsmiling” and taciturn), and the Fugitive-style plot is all too familiar. This oddly archaic novel never manages to engage.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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