Helpful Score: 3
I am a nurse and was intrigued by the medical and ethical aspects of this story, but I just could not get into it. I did not finish reading it.
Helpful Score: 2
If computers could register all brain electrical impulses, couldn't they then keep a body alive even if the brain had "died"? Could one then isolate the very essence of the mind, the anima, the soul? When 13-year-old Tyler Jessup suffers profound brain injury, two neurosurgeons see conflicting opportunities. One wants to replace damaged brain cells with regenerated ones, the other wants to use a machine to separate the mind from its physical surroundings. Tyler's father, desperate to rescue his son, ultimately subjects himself to the latter experiment in order to find his son's psyche and bring it back. Darnton, a veteran New York Times editor, skillfully pushes current science just a bit further in his third novel and for the most part makes the what-if plausible. As he did in The Experiment with cloning humans on demand, he makes the science accessible but not intrusive while adding sometimes lurid plot twists. The suspense is largely psychological and emotional though no less frightening in its moral and religious implications.
Helpful Score: 2
"What really scares us about science & technology isn't that they will be perverted by mad researchers or abused by dictatiors. It's that their progress is unstoppable, irreversible. John Darnton taps into that FEAR in his latest 'science adventure' thriller." --Los Angeles Times --
Helpful Score: 1
This one is every bit as good as Darnton's perhaps better known THE EXPERIMENT!
From back cover: Brain damaged in a near-death trauma, thirteen-year-old Tyler lies in a New York hospital bed. At his side, his father waits helplessly as two scientists take charge of the boy's fate.
One is a neurosurgeon. His unorthodox approach uses computers to control the patient's responses. The other is a researcher with an experimental method of his own--isolate the spark of human consciousness . . . and capture it forever.
Together, they're sending Tyler far beyond the frontiers of medical science into a dark and terrifying netherworld of man and machine--a place no living soul has gone before . . . and from which one desperate person will try to bring him back.
From back cover: Brain damaged in a near-death trauma, thirteen-year-old Tyler lies in a New York hospital bed. At his side, his father waits helplessly as two scientists take charge of the boy's fate.
One is a neurosurgeon. His unorthodox approach uses computers to control the patient's responses. The other is a researcher with an experimental method of his own--isolate the spark of human consciousness . . . and capture it forever.
Together, they're sending Tyler far beyond the frontiers of medical science into a dark and terrifying netherworld of man and machine--a place no living soul has gone before . . . and from which one desperate person will try to bring him back.
Helpful Score: 1
This book was very hard to put down! I thoroughly enjoyed this very fast-paced book, and recommend it to anyone who likes suspense.