In His Own Image

by Jeremy Gorman


Formats

Softcover
$21.49
E-Book
$2.95
Softcover
$21.49

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 7/05/2001

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 5.5x8.5
Page Count : 332
ISBN : 9780738839004
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 332
ISBN : 9781524592707

About the Book

In a wheel chair and marked by an ugly birthmark over much of his face, Dr. Adam SZYMANSKI (POV) has been obsessed by hereditary diseases all his life.   But  there is a cloud over the opening of his new Institute for  Genetic Disease Control (IGDC)  For one thing his patented process for making synthetic replacement genes for those  missing in victims of such diseases as hemophilia or  phenylketonuria can only be delivered to human eggs in an extrauterine fertilization process.  That, he quickly discovers, makes untreatable over 90% of the potential beneficiaries who don’t know they have the disease until they are born.     In addition the Szymanski process does not find favor among several groups of activists and newspapers who deliberately choose to misinterpret its purpose and function.  Pickets surround his new building as they did its run-down predecessor.  “Eugenics”, “Engineered Children”, “The People Factory”  as well as “Human Guinea Pigs” fill the loud rhetoric surrounding the controversial IGDC.  Adam battles the picketers and is sued for assault.  

The Szymanski process is a computer driven chemical process deliberately limited to the specific genes responsible for the subject disease to prevent any possible side effects from spurious genetic material.  But it is so complex that it could not come to fruition without the computer expertise of IGDC co-founder Michael RICHARDSON, a PhD from  Cambridge and an Olympic gold medalist in swimming.  From humble beginnings in Britain,  Michael is torn between his love for his work and  his obsessive unsatisfied need for money.  He has already expanded the role of the IGDC with a genetic information bank from which he supplies subscribers medical and genetic information on hereditary diseases for a fee.   The data bank doesn’t quite bring the IGDC into the black, so he also accepts a special project for the study of hereditary diseases endemic to the Mideast    

Not everyone fears the synthetic gene factory.  There are some who covet this ability to genetically alter the human condition.   Josip MIKHAILOVICH despises ethnic cleansing in his native Bosnia and is determined to use the Szymanski process as a way to by-pass it with “ethnic enhancement”.  Towards this end he devises elaborate schemes to wrest the process from the IGDC.  But Josip has to work with brash young activists like Draja GREGORICH who’s missionary zeal impels them  to eliminate the enemy.   Draja finds working with Josip both baffling and frustrating.  Nonetheless they incite activist groups,  former patients, politicians and newspaper reporters like Pamela BERGER--a freshman reporter with the local Daviston Star.  They even infiltrate the IGDC and try to influence its board of trustees-- a committee of the board of trustees of Haalvorsen University on whose medical school campus and under whose wing the IGDC operates.   The board finds many reasons to doubt the wisdom of bringing the IGDC aboard.  

Gloria WICKERSHAM, a patrician from the founding family of Haalvorsen, has an infant, Brian,  with Severe Combined Immunity Deficiency (SCID.)  A concert pianist, Gloria comes to the IGDC to prevent having another child with the same affliction.  But during the preparatory testing, Theresa FERNANDEZ, an IGDC lab tech who is working her way through medical school, discovers that the SCID child is not the son of Gloria’s attorney husband Arthur.   A devout catholic from rural Puerto Rico she quits thew case but is talked back into it by Adam. She later discovers by accident that the father is Michael Richardson. She is morally outraged, quits and returns home to Puerto Rico. Adam goes tpo Puerto Rico to convince her to return. Meanwhile Gloria contracts meningitis on one pof her many free concert tours at chilfren´s hospitals. She transmits it to her SCID son whohas no resuistance to the disease. Aam reveals his plan to attach the immunity fraghment to a mild invasive virus and trea


About the Author

Jeremy Gorman is a retired chemist and research director from a NYSE company. He became progressively more interested in the lives of the people and how they were effected by technological advances of society. Mr. Gorman believes that people can get a better understanding of technology through realistic fiction than they can from scientific papers which neglect many of the agonies associated with sociological change. He has had many technical papers published and several short stories, but the novel provides a better opportunity for an in depth study of the people involved with technological advance. He has written five novels, but this is the first to be published. He tends toward science fiction but in settings of everyday life at the turn of the century.