ESCAPE FROM EXTINCTION
Widower and botanist Muir O’Brien discovers a rare fern while hunting in the wilds of Oregon—so rare, in fact, that it was believed to have disappeared forever during the last ice age. He finds it on the property of a mysterious company called Arcadia, which occupies a lot of otherwise uninhabited countryside. The person behind Arcadia is Leo Bonelli, the richest man on Earth and the mind behind the world’s largest biotech company, SynBioData. He’s often accused of playing God, and his newest endeavors may just prove his critics right—as they “would allow not only the prevention of disease through the elimination of the genetic mutations that cause it, but the creation and reshaping of life itself.” Leo takes an interest in Muir, letting him in on some of his plans for his 10,000-square-mile “experiment in biodiversity” in the Oregon high desert. But Muir soon realizes that Leo plans to do something that no one sees coming: resurrect humankind’s extinct cousin, the Neanderthal. It’s a plan that will have far-reaching consequences in the lives of Muir and his daughter, Lilith. Rich’s prose is smooth and measured, laying out the particulars of scientific theory in minute detail, and he does the same for his characters’ surroundings: “Instead of a window, [Muir’s] desk faced a wall of shelves covered with scores of small pots, each of which nurtured the seedling of a de-extincted Paleolithic plant.” With its mix of cutting-edge science and moral quandaries, readers will find that the book reminds them at times of the work of the late bestselling author Michael Crichton. However, the thriller element of this novel is relatively muted to allow for a deeper examination of the characters and their relationships. Although the novel ends up in a place that some will find predictable, it’s still a highly readable and timely riff on the Frankenstein theme.
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