Product Details
Mount Dragon

Mount Dragon
By Douglas Preston, Lincoln Child

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Product Description

Mount Dragon: an enigmatic research complex hidden in the vast desert of New Mexico. Guy Carson and Susana Cabeza de Vaca have come to Mount Dragon to work shoulder to shoulder with some of the greatest scientific minds on the planet. Led by visionary genius Brent Scopes, their secret goal is a medical breakthrough that promises to bring incalculable benefits to the human race. But while Scopes believes he is leading the way to a new world order, he may in fact be opening the door to mass human extinction. And when Guy and Susana attempt to stop him they find themselves locked in a frightening battle with Scopes, his henchmen, and the apocalyptic nightmare that science has unleashed.
 


 


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #281249 in Books
  • Published on: 2007-11-27
  • Released on: 2007-11-27
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Mass Market Paperback
  • 512 pages

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
The writing team that scared the willies out of readers with Relic returns with a second, equally gripping novel of techno-terror. A genetically engineered mutation of DNA holds the promise of eradicating influenza forever. But there's a devastating catch: every living creature who comes in contact with the flu-killing virus dies horribly. In the eponymous research facility located deep in the Jornada del Muerto desert of New Mexico, young geneticist Guy Carson and his colleagues try to solve the problem, working in an atmosphere of increasing paranoia while the future of their employer, GeneDyne, rests on the actions of brilliant scientists driven by opposing motives. The authors weave together so many topical threads here (virtual reality, lost Spanish treasure, ethnic pride, scientific ethics) that only their tight control prevents this rousing scientific adventure from spinning away into hyperspace. It's a grand and scary story, with just enough grisly detail to stimulate real-life fears and characters full enough to engage the attention. The bleak desert provides another fearsome challenge to the novel's characters, as well as a metaphor for humanity's previous attempts to control nature. With science, outdoor adventure, sympathetic players and a catchy dusting of computer lore, there's something here to attract-and satisfy-a diverse range of readers. Author tour. (Feb.) ~ FYI: A teaser chapter from Mount Dragon will be included in the mass market edition of Relic, due out this month.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Guy Carson feels honored to be one of the few genetic scientists selected to work at Mount Dragon, Gene Dyne's heavily guarded compound in the New Mexican desert. The task: to defeat the influenza virus through permanent alteration of the DNA of the human race. The problem: previous attempts have resulted in the creation of an absolutely deadly form of the virus rather than immunity. Guy's job is to solve this problem. He willingly endures the stress and other discomforts of working in a biohazard unit, until he realizes that Gene Dyne's motives are less than altruistic and that the company will stop at nothing to turn a profit. Reading like a fictionalized rock-'em, sock-'em version of Richard Preston's The Hot Zone (LJ 8/94), this thriller from the coauthors of Relic (LJ 1/95) is sure to satisfy. Highly recommended for popular fiction collections.
- ?Rebecca House Stankowski, Purdue Univ. Calumet Lib., Hammond, Ind.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist
Brent Scopes and Charles Levine were boyhood and college friends, but Scopes became CEO of GeneDyne, a biochemical company involved in secret genetic engineering, while Levine became a Harvard professor vocally, effectively opposed to such work. Enter young Guy Carson, recently transferred to GeneDyne's lab at Mount Dragon to solve a scientific problem, which, aided by Susana Cabeza de Vaca, he does. Then he sees a colleague messily killed by the "X-FLU" virus and begins to question the whole program. A confrontation with the facility's security director, Nye, and the disappearance of an OSHA investigator exacerbate his doubts, and when Levine manages, thanks to the help of computer hacker and thalidomide victim Mime, to communicate with Guy, things get real tense. Guy and Susana blow up the lab and head for the desert, and ensuing chases involving the pair with Nye and Levine with Scopes (much of the latter in Scopes' invented "cypherspace" ) are exciting and imaginative. Read this, and you'll be panting for Preston and Child's next yarn. William Beatty