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Darwin's Radio

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
HUGO AWARD FINALIST • “WOW! What a splendid (scary) notion: a human upgrade! What a superb plot! Darwin's Radio is bloody damned good.”—Anne McCaffrey
“Virus hunter” Christopher Dicken is a man on a mission, following a trail of rumors, government cover-ups, and dead bodies around the globe in search of a mysterious disease that strikes only pregnant women and invariably results in miscarriage. But when Dicken finds what he’s looking for, the answer proves to be stranger—and far deadlier—than he ever could have imagined. Something that has slept in human DNA for millions of years is waking up.
Molecular biologist Kaye Lang has spent her career tracing ancient retroviruses in the human genome. She believes these microscopic fossils can come to life again. But when Dicken’s discovery becomes public, Lang’s theory suddenly turns to chilling fact. As the outbreak of this terrifying disease threatens to become a deadly epidemic, Dicken and Lang must race against time to assemble the pieces of a puzzle only they are equipped to solve—an evolutionary puzzle that will determine the future of the human race . . . if a future exists at all.
Praise for Darwin’s Radio

“Bear is one of our very best, and most innovative, speculative writers.”New York Daily News
“Superb . . . Bear's novel is frighteningly believable with a lot of clearly explained hard science, but the personal struggles of the well-realized characters keep everything on a human level.”Focus

“Bear is a writer of passionate vision.”Locus

Darwin’s Radio scores a high rating on the thrill monitor.”Birmingham Post (England)
“Absorbing and ingenious.”Kirkus Reviews
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from August 2, 1999
      Is evolution a gradual process, as Darwin believed, or can change occur suddenly, in an incredibly brief time span, as has been suggested by Stephen J. Gould and others? Bear (Dinosaur Summer and Foundation and Chaos) takes on one of the hottest topics in science today in this riveting, near-future thriller. Discredited anthropologist Mitch Rafelson has made an astonishing discovery in a recently uncovered ice cave in the Alps--the mummified remains of a Neanderthal couple and their newborn, strangely abnormal child. Kaye Lang, a molecular biologist specializing in retroviruses, has unearthed chilling evidence that so-called junk DNA may have a previously unguessed-at purpose in the scheme of life. Christopher Dicken, a virus hunter at the National Center for Infectious Diseases in Atlanta, is hot in pursuit of a mysterious illness, dubbed Herod's flu, which seems to strike only expectant mothers and their fetuses. Gradually, as the three scientists pool their results, it becomes clear that Homo sapiens is about to face its greatest crisis, a challenge that has slept within our genes since before the dawn of humankind. Bear is one of the modern masters of hard SF, and this story marks a return to the kind of cutting-edge speculation that made his Blood Music one of the genre's all-time classics. Centered on well-developed, highly believable figures who are working scientists and full-fledged human beings, this fine novel is sure to please anyone who appreciates literate, state-of-the-art SF. (Sept.) FYI: Bear has won two Hugos and four Nebulas.

    • Library Journal

      Starred review from August 1, 1999
      The discovery of a sexually transmitted retrovirus heralds a breakthrough in the understanding of the human genotype while spelling potential disaster for the human race--and the beginning of a new phase in evolution. As scientists and researchers wage a desperate battle to unlock the secrets of the virus known as SHEVA, a few far-sighted individuals attempt to cope with the possibility that something entirely new might replace humankind in the evolutionary pattern. Bear (Blood Music) remains in the forefront of speculative sf, displaying a genius for portraying the excitement of hard science through the struggles of his all-too-human characters. Filled with the author's lucid intelligence, this compelling novel should appeal to fans of science mystery as well as to hard-core sf readers. A priority purchase.

      Copyright 1999 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      July 1, 1999
      Bear posits that humanity's next evolutionary step could be climbed by means of a disease. In a fascinating story that will please his fans and increase their number, Bear creates an evolutionary agent called scattered human endogenous retrovirus activation, or SHERVA. Wanting a more dramatic name, the Centers for Disease Control takes the R out to make it SHEVA, close to the name of the Hindu god of destruction. As it happens, the new name is uncomfortably apt. The book opens with anthropologist Mitch Rafelson at work on a frozen family of three found in an Alpine cave, all of whom show signs of SHEVA. Meanwhile, microbiologist Kaye Lamb, author of several solid scientific papers on human viruses and maker of some startling predictions, is called to the Republic of Georgia to examine the bodies of some slain men and pregnant women that manifest SHEVA. How did the three bodies get in the Alpine cave? Why were the men and, especially, the pregnant women in Georgia murdered? The slowly disclosed answers to those questions bring Mitch, Kaye, and longtime CDC global virus hunter Christopher Dicken together. SHEVA seems to be carried by a new disease that the CDC has named Herod's flu, for which there is no vaccine. The victims of Herod's flu do not have typical flu symptoms, however, for Herod's is a "hideously inventive disease" that leads to evolutionary changes. Lots of food for thought and nightmares here. ((Reviewed July 1999))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 1999, American Library Association.)

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 2, 1999
      In the medical/SF tradition of Robin Cook, Bear (Blood Music) spins an outlandish tale of evolutionary apocalypse. In an ice cave in the Swiss Alps, Mitch Rafelson, a renegade paleontologist, discovers a frozen Neanderthal family, including an oddly evolved infant. Meantime, in Soviet Georgia, Kaye Lang, a microbiologist, is investigating a massacre site, where pregnant women were exterminated. These events relate--by way of elliptical scientific reasoning--to a retrovirus being hunted by U.S. government scientist Christopher Dicken. Called SHEVA, it causes genetic mutations in embryos and may also be an agent of evolution, ushering into being a new race of humans. Is it a sexually transmitted disease? Or, more sinister, is it a God-sent means of delivering up a new Adam for the millennium? When Mitch and Kaye fall in love, then decide to bring their own SHEVA baby to full term, they are about to find out the truth firsthand. This complicated tale is read somberly by the deep-voiced Rudnicki, who works hard to keep the sense of drama high through all the mumbo jumbo. Simultaneous release with the Ballantine hardcover.

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Languages

  • English

Levels

  • ATOS Level:5.5
  • Interest Level:9-12(UG)
  • Text Difficulty:4

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