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  Robert J Sawyer – Frameshift - Review
posted by alexmc6 on Friday September 15, @07:25AM ( Printer Friendly Version.| Email this article)
Science Fiction coverMarkus reviews Frameshift, a Genetics-based crime thriller by Robert J Sawyer, and considers that Science – even hard science – it is for sure. And I hope by God that it is fiction. Not sure if that makes it (hard) SF – but I’m sure it makes it a very impressive book, despite some flaws.

Robert J Sawyer, double Nebula winner, Hugo winner (for a later book) and winner of countless other prices provides us with story from the Human Genome Project. Science – even hard science – it is for sure. And I hope by God that it is fiction. Not sure if that makes it (hard) SF – but I’m sure it makes it a very impressive book, despite some flaws.

Dr Philip Tardivel is a Genetic Researcher at the Human Genome Project (which, as the story takes place, is not finished yet. If you can ever finish such a piece of work, give or take the latest tabloid headline of ‘Human Genome decoded!’). He is liaised with Molly Brown, a Doctor and lecturer in Psychology, who has telepathic abilities (she can read ‘literal’ thoughts of people physically close to her – more a curse than a blessing!). His boss is Burian Klimus, an old, unfriendly, Ukrainian emigrant and Nobel Prize Winner for the ‘Klimus Method’.
On another strand we get Avi Meyer, son of a Holocaust survivor who broke out of Treblinka during a prisoner revolt (the episode is part of the book!), and who (Avi, not his father!) works for the Department of Justice in a special unit which tracks down Nazi War Criminals in hiding.
The story unfolds from there – genetics mixes with murder mixes with neo (and old time) Nazis mixes with health and life insurance (who love genetic testing…) mixes with ethics mixes with some fiction (I hope it is!) to form a fascinating and engrossing read.

There’s a lot of ‘hot’ and contemporary concepts in this book – starting with the hot potato of Insurance companies using genetic testing and prediction to decide who they insure for what premium, and the ‘voluntary Eugenics’ approach of people who know they have defective genes refusing to sire children. It depicts the discussion and theories on how humanity developed and spread, and describes a breakthrough as Burian Klimus gets his hands on Neanderthal DNA (I think the story is a precursor for Sawyer’s ‘Neanderthal Parallax’ series) and the associated racist questions.
It contains another strand starting at Treblinka, one sadistic guard call Ivan ‘Grozny’ The Terrible, and the protagonists of a prisoner revolt, tracing them into the now and here, including a failed show process in Israel against a man accused to be Ivan.
The book also contains a good measure of hard, genetic science (it reminds me of the genetics parts in Hofstaedters ‘Goedel Escher Bach’ – now there’s a book you must read!), junk DNA, frameshift mutations (thus the title), and of course Molly, who has such a mutation – what a challenge for a researcher into genetics like Philip!

So what about the book in general? The genetics parts are fascinating and realistic (where they’re speculation and not hard science), and so is the Nazi/racism/war criminal strand in the story.
Humans, human behaviour and interaction are a bit clichéd, and sometimes nearly painful to read (not Sawyer’s strongest point at that time in his career!), and the story goes completely OTT when Philip turns amateur-sleuth (think CSI meets McGuiver. In a very cheesy way.)
The story itself is great, with some surprising twists and turns; a fascinating and hard-hitting read, and highly recommended if you’ve got any interest into genetics, the associated ethical and moral questions, and the scientific and historical background that defines this very modern field. Go get it!

Title: Frameshift
Author: Robert J Sawyer
Reviewer: Markus
Reviewer URL: http://skating.thierstein.net
Publisher: Voyager/Harper Collins
Publisher URL: http://www.voyager-books.com
Publication Date: 1999
Review Date: 20 August 2006
ISBN: 0006483208
Price: UKP5.99
Pages: 343p
Format: Paperback
Topic: SF
Topic: Genetics

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  • Robert J Sawyer – Frameshift - Review | Login/Create an Account | Top | 2 comments | Search Discussion
    Threshold:
    The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
    It's Sawyer, not Sawjer (Score:0)
    by Anonymous Coward on Friday September 15, @09:01AM (#270)
    It's Sawyer, not Sawjer, and he did win the Hugo award. In 2003 he won the Best Novel Hugo for "Hominids", see http://www.sfwriter.com/prhuwi03.htm
    [ Reply to This | Parent ]

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