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PRIZES

The three super-scientists Segal sets in motion work futuristic wonders, respectively, in genetics, immunology, and theoretical physics. They may not lope after gurneys like Doctors (1988), but the heroic trio lead strenuous lives, ER-style, all with an eye for the Nobel Prize. Adam Coopersmith, toiling in medical research for methods of preventing toxemia in pregnant women, is chosen by his beloved Harvard mentor to bring to a dying power broker in Washington, D.C., a possible cure—mice with human blood. (Never mind. All miracles accomplished here are based on ongoing research, declares the author, but don't try it at home.) Adam will marry the patient's daughter, a gorgeous, ambitious lawyer, but happiness will wane until a new wonderful love blossoms. Thereafter: glory and tragedy. Sandy Raven, geneticist and son of a Hollywood producer (Godzilla Meets Santa Claus!), is sandbagged by a doomed marriage, betrayal of a friend and mentor, and also his unrequited love and lust for a hometown bombshell who becomes overnight head of a studio and bounces Dad-the-producer. The shooting star of the lab luminaries is Isabel da Costa, a child prodigy who had been groomed by dazzled and dedicated dad Raymond for greatness in physics. It's while she's at MIT that she has a go at a Unified Field Theory (what Einstein died trying to come up with). But with all her successes, Isabel has a heavy possessive-dad problem. Dad dislikes boyfriend Jerry, whose brilliant mind has been on low beam for tennis tournaments. Isabel's Unified Field Theory is a smash (Jerry, on his way to Wimbledon, his professor dad, and Isabel, pull in final ``proofs'' with happy yelps). The scene is mainly Cambridge, California, and, of course, at the last, Stockholm. In Segal's high-gloss narration and dialogue, this is silly but benign, and the simplified science is, surprisingly, fun. (First printing of 250,000; Literary Guild main selection)

Pub Date: March 20, 1995

ISBN: 0-449-90859-3

Page Count: 480

Publisher: Ballantine

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 1995

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EVA LUNA

Here, after last year's Of Love and Shadows, the tale of a quirky young woman's rise to influence in an unnamed South American country—with a delightful cast of exotic characters, but without the sure-handed plotting and leisurely grace of Allende's first—and best—book, The House of the Spirits (1985). When little Eva Luna's mother dies, the imaginative child is hired out to a string of eccentric families. During one of her periodic bouts of rebellion, she runs away and makes friends with Huberto Naranjo, a slick little street-kid. Years later, when she's in another bind, he finds her a place to stay in the red-light district—with a cheerful madame, La Senora, whose best friend is Melesio, a transvestite cabaret star. Everything's cozy until a new police sergeant takes over the district and disrupts the accepted system of corruption. Melesio drafts a protesting petition and is packed off to prison, and Eva's out on the street. She meets Riad Halabi, a kind Arab merchant with a cleft lip, who takes pity on her and whisks her away to the backwater village of Agua Santa. There, Eva keeps her savior's sulky wife Zulema company. Zulema commits suicide after a failed extramarital romance, and the previously loyal visitors begin to whisper about the relationship between Riad Halabi and Eva. So Eva departs for the capital—where she meets up with Melesio (now known as Mimi), begins an affair with Huberto Naranjo (now a famous rebel leader), and becomes casually involved in the revolutionary movement. Brimming with hothouse color, amply displayed in Allende's mellifluous prose, but the riot of character and incident here is surface effect; and the action—the mishaps of Eva—is toothless and vague. Lively entertainment, then, with little resonance.

Pub Date: Oct. 21, 1988

ISBN: 0241951658

Page Count: -

Publisher: N/A

Review Posted Online: Sept. 13, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 1988

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ONE FLEW OVER THE CUCKOO'S NEST

Though extension is possible, make no mistake about it; this is a ward and not a microcosm.

This is a book which courts the dangers of two extremes.

It can be taken not seriously enough or, more likely, critical climate considered, too seriously. Kesey's first novel is narrated by a half-Indian schizophrenic who has withdrawn completely by feigning deaf-muteness. It is set in a mental ward ruled by Big Nurse—a monumental matriarch who keeps her men in line by some highly original disciplinary measures: Nursey doesn't spank, but oh that electric shock treatment! Into the ward swaggers McMurphy, a lusty gambling man with white whales on his shorts and the psychology of unmarried nurses down to a science. He leads the men on to a series of major victories, including the substitution of recent issues of Nugget and Playboy for some dated McCall's. The fatuity of hospital utilitarianism, that alcohol-swathed brand of idiocy responsible for the custom of waking patients from a deep sleep in order to administer barbiturates, is countered by McMurphy's simple, articulate, logic. This is a thoroughly enthralling, brilliantly tempered novel, peopled by at least two unforgettable characters. (Big Nurse is custom tailored for a busty Eileen Heckert.)

Though extension is possible, make no mistake about it; this is a ward and not a microcosm.

Pub Date: Feb. 1, 1962

ISBN: 0451163966

Page Count: 335

Publisher: Viking

Review Posted Online: Sept. 26, 2011

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Feb. 1, 1961

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