000 01810nam a22001577a 4500
008 161024b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
020 _a9780330426367
082 _223
_a813.54
_bCOO
100 _aCook, Robin.
245 _aSeizure /
_cRobin Cook
260 _aLondon:
_bPan Books,
_c2003.
300 _a550 p. ;
_bSoft-Bound,
_c18 cm.
505 _aX
520 _aWhat could the Shroud of Turin, a conservative Southern senator and an entrepreneurial researcher have in common? Here politics, religion and bio-science collide in the latest novel from the master of the medical thriller. Senator Ashley Butler is a quintessential demagogue whose support of traditional American values includes a knee-jerk reaction against virtually all bio-technologies. When he's called on to chair a sub-committee introducing legislation to ban new cloning technology, the senator views it as a keystone to his political future. As a consequences, Dr Daniel Lowell-inventor of a technique that will take stem-cell research up to next level-sees a barrier being raised before his biotech start-up. These seemingly opposite personalities may clash during the Senate hearings, yet the two men share a common failing. Butler's hunger for political power far outstrips his genuine concern for the unborn; while Lowell's pursuit of massive personal wealth and celebrity overrides any real considerations for his patients'well-being. Further complicating their confrontation is the confidential news that Senator Butler has developed Parkinson's disease-which leads the senator and the researcher into a Faustian pact. But in attempting to utilize Lowell's new technology prematurely, the therapy leaves the senator with the horrifying effects of temporal lobe epilepsy-causing seizures of the bizarrest order.
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_cBK
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_d3277