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Invasive Procedures

Invasive Procedures

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Authors: Orson Scott Card, Aaron Johnston
Publisher: Tor Books
Category: Book

List Price: $25.95
Buy Used: $1.12
You Save: $24.83 (96%)



New (40) Used (50) Collectible (5) from $1.12

Rating: 2.5 out of 5 stars 50 reviews

Media: Hardcover
Edition: 1st
Pages: 352
Number Of Items: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2
Dimensions (in): 9.3 x 6.4 x 1.4

ISBN: 076531424X
Dewey Decimal Number: 813.54
EAN: 9780765314246

Publication Date: September 18, 2007
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available

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Also Available In:

  • Mass Market Paperback - Invasive Procedures
  • Audio Cassette - Invasive Procedures
  • Audio Download - Invasive Procedures (Unabridged)
  • CD-ROM - Invasive Procedures
  • Audio CD - Invasive Procedures

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description
George Galen is a brilliant scientist, a pioneer in gene therapy. But Galen is dangerously insane – he has created a method to alter human DNA, not just to heal diseases, but to “improve” people – make them stronger, make them able to heal more quickly, and make them compliant to his will.
Frank Hartman is also a brilliant virologist, working for the government’s ultra-secret bio-hazard agency. He has discovered how to neutralize Galen’s DNA-changing virus, making him the one man who stands in the way of Galen’s plan to "improve" the entire human race.
This taut thriller takes the reader a few years into the future, and shows the promise and danger of new genetic medicine techniques.



Customer Reviews:   Read 45 more reviews...

1 out of 5 stars Plot hole for a mac truck....   November 27, 2008
J. Fosnaugh (Florida)
Don't waste your money. I agree with other reviewers that this book was a great idea poorly executed to the extreme.

**Spoiler alert***

If you can possibly spoil the plot of such an awful novel.

Seriously. If Galen (the main bad guy) has all of these devote followers and people he has cured.... you would think he would have found some volunteers for his immortality experiment. It would have been a lot less trouble than kidnapped victims.

It's such a bad plot point. We are really supposed to believe that a guy so smart he can manipulate the genome to cure devastating diseases doesn't think to use volunteers?

But then again the book would end on page 3.




2 out of 5 stars The difference between a screenplay and a novel   November 4, 2008
Doug Busch (Sacramento, CA USA)
As a huge fan of OSC, I hesitated to start Invasive Procedures when I saw he had a co-writer. After forcing myself to finish it, I can only say my instincts were sound. This 'novel' reads much more like the first draft of a screenplay, and is a huge disappointment. Only the broadest outlines of characters are present; a good director and actors might be able to fill in the white space and make us care about them, but the plot is fragmented and almost a parody of itself. I hope that this was a failed experiment by one of my favorite writers, rather than a shortcut to another book. I've watched too many outstanding writers fall into this trap of poorly executed collaborations (Tom Clancy is a sad example).


3 out of 5 stars It was a fun (and creepy) read   October 25, 2008
Daniel Jensen (Washington, DC)
"Invasive Procedures" is not Card's best work - mainly because most of it is not done by Card. However, that doesn't mean that Aaron Johnston, with whom Card collaborated on this work, didn't do a good job in writing an interesting screenplay-turned-novel, because he did. It's just not what we're used to seeing under the cover of a Card book.

Having said that, once you get past the "This is Orson Scott Card???" reflex and take the story for what it is - a science-fiction medical thriller, you'll have a lot of fun. As with many non-hard sci-fi stories, you have to take things with a grain of salt. Remember that this story isn't supposed to be about what's real, or even possible with today's medical science. It's a traditional "what-if" thriller that takes the reader on a fun ride through fantasyland. In that respect, this book hits it's mark.

The characters aren't fleshed out much beyond detailed outlines (except for our protagonist, Frank), and the story borders on the absurd. But it's fun. If you let it, this book will engage you. You won't be talking about it in 10 years like Card's more famous books, but you'll be entertained. It's a perfect book for the beach, plane ride or waiting room.

So, take a deep breath, hold your expectations and have fun!



1 out of 5 stars Written like a trite Hollywood Movie   October 19, 2008
T. C. Healey (Rochester, NY)
This book was lame. I've enjoyed Card in the past; this is nothing like his best work, in style nor quality. Don't waste your time. Preachy plot, flat characters, absurd action sequences. And, it gets worse as you near the end.


1 out of 5 stars Orson, your name is your brand...   October 18, 2008
Spike McLarty (Vashon, WA USA)
and you really sullied it when you allowed it to appear on the cover of this book. If anybody, like me, looks at the name dominating the cover and thinks "Oh good, an Orson Scott Card book! Creative premise, plausible science, carefully constructed plot, interesting characters..." *BLAAAT* Wrong! Guess again. This stinker reads exactly like what it is: A screenplay for a generic Hollywood sci-fi/horror B-movie. Flat, generic characters, including the lead and the 'love interest'. Turning points where the characters do something stupid and against policy and against their (otherwise extensive) training, because.. well, that's what the plot requires! Super-secret government agencies! Clueless ambitious bureaucrats! A demented evil genius scientist who has *single-handedly* advanced 20 years beyond the rest of the world *in his secret lab in an abandoned building*. Gosh, that's a fresh idea. And so believable - right out of the headlines. Aaargh!!! Not to mention the idiotic science. DNA that causes people's faces to melt - I hope some biochemist approved that one, because it *sounds* like utter BS to me. (Plot spoiler:) Programming one man's memories and personality into somebody else using DNA! Lessee... trillions of synapses in the brain, hundreds of thousands of genes... Hey, close enough, maybe they used a .zip file. Ugh, what a stinker. I couldn't finish it.