Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... Genusby Jonathan Trigell
None Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Genus is gritty. It happens 1-2 hundred or so years in our future. Things have changed, and yet, it’s amazing how much they’ve stayed the same. Still the have’s and have not’s, still ‘us’ vs. ‘them’. But we now have a new line in the sand to use for discrimination. It’s not our race any more or the color of our skin, not even our religion (because that has mostly been wiped out) but our genes. A scientist discovered a way to manipulate human DNA reliably and those who can afford it (and those who can’t afford not to) pay for designer babies, no longer are our children’s future left up to chance. We come upon the scene when Improved vs. Unimproved is reaching its pinnacle. Those whose parents didn’t pay for improvements to their genes are fast becoming 2nd class citizens. They are unwanted and underfoot. Most came from the poor who couldn’t afford gene manipulations and the remnants of the religious who believed it to be an act against God to play god with their offspring. Now these poor are slowly herded into places like the Kross. They are poor because they are unimproved and can’t find gainful employment and they are unimproved because they are poor. Healthy women have a commodity as a ‘broodmare’ they can sell; carrying other women's improved children to term. Everyone else tries to make do how they can. I found this book to be thought provoking and very well written. It had a mystery that was very well done and turned out to be a great conspiracy. The underlying story is taking a look at hate of others for being different, in the end it was very similar to the Nazi’s and the Jews, the US and the Native Americans, the Muslims in Bosnia. Anywhere hate of the other is allowed to fester or worse encouraged to the point of genocide. While the story is told from the point of view of several different people, the primary one is a cripple, born from hubris. A man trying to make his way in the world the best he can, with what talent he has. It really makes you think. no reviews | add a review
In the Britain of a few tomorrows time, physical perfection is commonplace and self improvement has become an extinct expression: all the qualities men and women could aspire to can be purchased prior to birth. GENUS is a time of genetic selection and enrichment - life chances come on a sliding scale according to wealth. For some there is no money or choice, and an underclass has evolved; London's King's Cross, or The Kross as it is now known, has become a ghetto for the Unimproved. In The Kross, the natural, the dated, the cheap and the dull, live a brittle and unenviable existence. But unrest is growing; tension is mounting and a murderer is abroad in these dark quarters... Acclaimed author Jonathan Trigell's third novel is a breathtaking tour de force, exploring a dystopia of the not-too-distant-a future which will leave readers wondering not 'what if', as the original audience of Huxley's Brave New World did, but 'when'. No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.92Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
|
It has subtle flowing language throughout - I learned the words inutile and fubsy in a couple of paragraphs. And then there's this...
"Whole nations can be wrong and so often have been. Quantity does not create sense, but only a sense of sense. if something is not real then it must be imagined. The fact that the same delusion is shared by two people or ten or ten million doesn't make it more real, only more dangerous." ( )