Djerassi, Carl No ISBN 13: 9780140296549

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A compelling novel based on the high-stakes biotech industry and the science behind Viagra from the internationally known “Father of the Pill.”
 
The fourth installment of Carl Djerassi’s pioneering “science-in-fiction” tetralogy tells the story of a husband and wife team who devise new solutions to problems associated with sex and reproduction. Renu Krishnan is an Indian-born, American-educated scientist who discovers how NO (nitric oxide) can help men with erectile dysfunction—the scientific rationale behind Viagra. At the same time, her husband, Israeli scientist Jephtah Cohn, develops a new approach to ovulation prediction, which is also based on factual research. When Wall street gets wind of their discoveries, the couple catapults in the fast paced world of lawyers and IPOs, where scientists are now a hot commodity. Deftly exploring the demanding worlds of academia and high finance, Djerassi brings back many characters from his three earlier novels for a satisfying conclusion.

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About the Author:
Carl Djerassi is an internationally renowned scientist whose books include the novel Marx, Deceased; his autobiography The Pill, Pygmy Chimps, and Degas' Horse; essay, poetry, and short-story collections and two plays. A professor of chemistry at Stanford University, he is a member of the National Academy of Sciences and is one of the few American scientists to have been awarded both the National Medal of Science and the National Medal of Technology.
From The New England Journal of Medicine:
The recent publication of superb fiction by contemporary physicians -- Richard Selzer, Ethan Canin, Susan Mates, and Ferrol Sams, among others -- suggests that physicians are granted, by their medicine, a privileged view of human events, and that doctors graced with literary gifts can, indeed, give the world news that is unavailable to other writers. Two new novels written by physicians support this idea, although in extravagantly different ways.

NO, by Carl Djerassi, is a romp of excess, a set of vaguely related plot lines that converge on insatiability and the drive to control biologic and social events. The margin of uncertainty recedes with every chapter, eventually transforming the world into financial, reproductive, and emotional formulas that erase doubt, replacing mystery with puzzles that can be cracked scientifically. The White Life, by Michael Stein, is a spare, first-person narrative, probing not greed and control but their opposites: gratitude for the unnamed gifts of the universe, humility in the face of the unknown and the unknowable, and a sense of being dazzled and nourished by the mysterious, the unexpected, and the silent revelations of ordinary life.

In NO, young molecular biologist Renu Krishnan has synthesized novel nitric oxide-releasing agents and becomes the pivotal American scientist in a global enterprise. Along the way, Renu falls in love with and marries her Israeli coinvestigator, learns hard lessons about academic politics, disclaims traditional Indian notions of womanhood, takes intellectual and financial risks in bringing her product to market, and becomes a millionaire and potential Nobelist. Along the way, the reader learns an astonishing amount about intracellular messenger molecules, mechanisms of penile tumescence, intracytoplasmic sperm injection, and prefertilization determinants of fetal sex, as well as how to pull off a successful initial public offering, how to navigate a New Drug Application through the Food and Drug Administration, and how to profit from corporate start-ups and stock options.

The intercalation of distinct plot elements is marvelously playful and revealing. As soon as nitric oxide is called "promiscuous," the various governing images of this pop-scientific thriller collapse into identity: science, venture capital, intellectual drive, and sexual drive are equated, while the intracellular becomes a metaphor for the interpersonal. All this breathless business culminates in courtship displays and big-bucks risk taking, and, at the end, everybody is rich and therefore happy.

"Mr. Dittus is bereft of something," broods The White Life's Dr. Cave about his unusual, unfocused, obscure, and willful new patient. When Cave was 13 years old, his father died of a heart attack; he became a doctor to protest his loss. Convinced that he, too, will die while his sons are teenagers, the novel's protagonist lives as if he is a temporary visitor to a strange planet, proud of his ability to exchange pleasantries with the natives, stunned by their ease in moving through a day of this stuff, and awed by the simplest aspects of ordinary life. His provisional perch grants him an astonishingly clear view of medicine, of sickness, and of life.

Cave admits to his hospital ward a man who has just had his second myocardial infarction in two weeks and who reminds him of his father. The man reminds him of himself as well -- both the doctor and the patient are men easily lost and out of place. Although stabilized by the corporeal rituals and language of medicine, Cave lives "on the edge of the uncontrollable," and, like his patient Dittus, finds himself "confused by the signposts." Meeting Dittus propels Cave to confront his own father's physician, whom he accuses of killing his father, seeking answers or justice. He receives only more yearning sadness and more of the unanswerable, but realizes, as a dividend, how like his father he has become.

What general internist Michael Stein does in this novel is to offer, with resonant intelligence and the generous irony of Walker Percy or Milan Kundera, scenes and questions of medicine to the world at large, a world he suspects is bereft of metaphors for its own meaning. This local story about minor medical events in Providence over a four-day period in June enlarges, by virtue of the author's gift, to embrace and illuminate the perils, the abandonments, the dark joys, and the giddy celebrations of being human. Stein's novel about a doctor and his patient splits the "white light" of hospitals so that it penetrates the opaque and suffuses the familiar with translucent meaning. Says Cave, "Thomas Mann was right: `All interest in disease and death is only another expression of interest in life."'

Reviewed by Rita Charon, M.D., Ph.D.
Copyright © 1999 Massachusetts Medical Society. All rights reserved. The New England Journal of Medicine is a registered trademark of the MMS.

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  • PublisherPenguin Books
  • Publication date2000
  • ISBN 10 0140296549
  • ISBN 13 9780140296549
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages288
  • Rating

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9780820320328: No: A Novel

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ISBN 10:  0820320323 ISBN 13:  9780820320328
Publisher: Univ of Georgia Pr, 1998
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Book Description Paperback. Condition: new. Paperback. A compelling novel based on the high-stakes biotech industry and the science behind Viagra from the internationally known Father of the Pill. The fourth installment of Carl Djerassis pioneering science-in-fiction tetralogy tells the story of a husband and wife team who devise new solutions to problems associated with sex and reproduction. Renu Krishnan is an Indian-born, American-educated scientist who discovers how NO (nitric oxide) can help men with erectile dysfunctionthe scientific rationale behind Viagra. At the same time, her husband, Israeli scientist Jephtah Cohn, develops a new approach to ovulation prediction, which is also based on factual research. When Wall street gets wind of their discoveries, the couple catapults in the fast paced world of lawyers and IPOs, where scientists are now a hot commodity. Deftly exploring the demanding worlds of academia and high finance, Djerassi brings back many characters from his three earlier novels for a satisfying conclusion. Cutting edge research on human reproductive biology in the hothouse atmosphere of Silicon Valley is the focus of this last installment in Carl Djerassi's pioneering "science-in-fiction" tetralogy. Renu Krishnan is an Indian-born, American-educated scientist who discovers how "No" (nitric oxide) can help men with erectile dysfunction, which describes the research behind Viagra. At the same time, her husband, Israeli scientist Jephtah Cohn, develops a new approach to ovulation prediction, which again is based on current medical research. Djerassi brings back many characters from his three earlier novels for a satisfying conclusion in the high-stakes world of biotechnology. Shipping may be from multiple locations in the US or from the UK, depending on stock availability. Seller Inventory # 9780140296549

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