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Rick Hayden and Laura Fanning of Panacea return to encounter another mindbending scientific scenario in, The God Gene, the new thriller by F. Paul Wilson.Rick's brother, Keith, a prominent zoologist at NYU, walks out of his office one day and disappears. The only clue they have are his brother's book, which mentions "the God Gene." A million or so years ago, a gene designated hsa-mir-3998 appeared as if by magic from the junk DNA of the hominids who eventually evolved into Homo sapiens. It became a key player in brain development--specifically creativity--and laymen started calling it "the God Gene." Keith had been tracking this gene through the evolutionary tree, and was excited by an odd blue-eyed primate he brought back from East Africa. But immediately after running the creature's genetic code, he destroyed all the results and vanished.Rick and Laura's search takes them to an uncharted island in the Mozambique Channel, home of the dapis--blue-eyed primates whose DNA hides a world-shattering secret. In a globe-spanning mixture of science, mystery and adventure reminiscent of Michael Crichton, The God Gene takes you to the edge of evolutionary theory and beyond...way beyond.… (more)
User reviews
First, the story. Rick and Laura end up on another chase but this time it is for Rick's missing brother instead. Rick's brother has liquidated his funds and transferred them to an offshore account and then disappeared. When informed of this by his mother, Rick commits to finding his brother. Laura insists on being his rational angle to Rick's not necessarily logical approach. The two of them follow the money and the uncovered clues to an amazing discovery.
I didn't have as much of a problem with the follow-the-clues approach as I did with PANACEA; it was possibly because the search was more direct with less country hopping. Or maybe it just made more sense to me. I will admit that I was a little underwhelmed by the response to their genetic discovery. In my mind, it was huge. And while the characters addressed and discussed it, they also didn't do much about it. To be honest though, I'm not sure what else they could have done; they had evidence of ICE but in the big picture, it wasn't anything they could do something with. It was a good way to end an enjoyable book and leave the readers wondering what mystery was next. Oh, I will admit that I geeked out when the town of Monroe was mentioned. A solid entry into the world of Repairman Jack, but without Jack.
Rick wonders if this little, impossibly intelligent primate, could have been"placed" on Earth to confound the path of humans, by the overlords of the universe.
P.137:
"early on she'd dismissed Rick's wild theory that sapience was so rare in the universe that it attracted attention - the wrong kind. As a result, humans had become the playthings of 'intellects vast, cool, and unsympathetic'-- a phrase he'd snagged from H.G. Wells. He claimed the Panacea--the ikhar--had been created by these intellects to throw a monkey wrench into all of humankind's concepts of a knowable universe by breaking All the rules.
Ridiculous, right?
But that Blithe certainty had been turned on its pointed little head. After seeing the ikhar cure a raging viral meningitis, a cardiomyopathy, and now end - stage MS, she had to wonder if maybe it had truly originated, as Rick put it, outside."
This author is a speciesist, like almost every single human in the Western world. They can't stand the suffering of the Animals we call our"pets," but every other Animal that can serve the oh-so-deserving (fuc*ing) human is fair game:
P.146:
"Laura said, 'does it ever bother you? The animals, I mean?'
Laura couldn't help remembering the dog she'd operated on in med school and finally had to sacrifice. Even though it was unconscious under heavy anesthesia, it damn near ripped her heart out when she tied off its main coronary artery.
Mito shrugged. 'It did at first. But my job is to see that they stay healthy and are treated humanely. You can't romanticize them, or anthropomorphize them.'
'hard not to when we share common ancestors.'
'look, they play an indispensable part in saving hundreds, thousands, sometimes millions of human lives.' "
Another example of speciesism, and a reason why the author lost one-half a star:
P.157:
"Knowing his life span depended on what happened next, Mahdi trembled as he watched the rat in horrid fascination.
'H-how long will the VX take?'
'not long. It's quickly absorbed through the skin. But I hate to call it VX.' he turned to the cage. Dear rat, you've just been sprayed with O - ethyl S - two - diisopropylaminoethyl methylphosphonothiolate. Isn't that a beautiful name? Why settle for a colorless abbreviation like VX when the full name has so much more character?'
Mahdi had no watch and wished he could check his phone to keep track of the passing time, but it sat on the table inside. He would leave it if he could and buy a new one in town. He wanted very much to be far, far away from this man.
The rat began to Twitch.
'see? The acetylcholinesterase blockade is spreading, causing uncontrolled muscle contractions. After a series of normal contractions, the super contractions start, effectively paralyzing the victim.'
the rat's breathing became rapid. Soon it was trembling all over.
'eventually the super contractions hit the diaphragm, and when the diaphragm stops working...'
suddenly the rat went into a prolonged fit -- Mahdi had seen an epileptic seizure once and this was very much like that, only worse. it ended in the stillness of death.
Mahdi let out a long, slow breath. The VX had worked...horribly. What an awful way to die, even for garbage - eating vermin."
Yes, I will read the next book in the series. For one reason, Jeukens, the South African who Rick believes is his brother Keith, gave us plenty of hints that he is not really Keith, leaving me with questions. And, I want to experience more of the travelogue-type scenery that these protagonists get to travel to.