The Peer Review (Paperback)
Harlan Voss
Sold by AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
AbeBooks Seller since June 22, 2007
New - Soft cover
Condition: New
Ships from Australia to U.S.A.
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketSold by AussieBookSeller, Truganina, VIC, Australia
AbeBooks Seller since June 22, 2007
Condition: New
Quantity: 1 available
Add to basketPaperback. She challenged the theory. He owned the system.Dr. Noor Esfahani is a tenure-track neuroscientist at Carworth University with clean data and a paper that could reshape her field. Her research on synaptic pruning directly contradicts the cascade model - the foundational theory championed by her department chair, Dr. Malcolm Pryce, for over three decades.When her paper is rejected through a suspiciously targeted anonymous peer review, Noor notices something no one was supposed to catch: a single phrase in the reviewer's comments that traces back to one man. The man who controls her tenure. The man who edits the journal. The man who built an empire on numbers that were never his.What begins as a rejected manuscript becomes something far more dangerous - an investigation into thirty years of scientific fraud, institutional silence, and systematically destroyed careers. As Noor digs deeper, she discovers she is not the first to challenge Pryce. She is simply the first to survive long enough to build a case.A former doctoral student, exiled to a fishing town after his dissertation data was deliberately erased. A department administrator carrying her dead mother's evidence in unopened boxes. A whistleblower's letter sealed in an envelope for three decades. A wife who heard the truth at a Christmas party in 1994 and spent thirty years unable to speak it. One by one, the silenced find their way to Noor - and the proof they carry is devastating.But Pryce is not a man who waits to be accused. His retaliation is surgical, bureaucratic, and deniable: frozen budgets, revoked lab access, manipulated tenure committees, and a protege willing to do whatever it takes to protect the legacy they both depend on. Every move Noor makes is met with an institutional countermove designed to make her look unstable, ungrateful, or unworthy.The Peer Review is a psychological thriller set in the elite corridors of American academia, where the most dangerous weapons are not guns or knives but budget memos, anonymous reviews, and the quiet machinery of institutional power. It is a story about what happens when a woman with proof goes up against a system built to ensure that proof never sees the light.In science, peer review is meant to separate truth from ambition. But when the reviewer is the fraud, the process becomes the weapon - and the only defense is the data itself. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our Sydney, NSW warehouse or from our UK or US warehouse, depending on stock availability.
Seller Inventory # 9798235144217
She challenged the theory. He owned the system.
Dr. Noor Esfahani is a tenure-track neuroscientist at Carworth University with clean data and a paper that could reshape her field. Her research on synaptic pruning directly contradicts the cascade model - the foundational theory championed by her department chair, Dr. Malcolm Pryce, for over three decades.
When her paper is rejected through a suspiciously targeted anonymous peer review, Noor notices something no one was supposed to catch: a single phrase in the reviewer's comments that traces back to one man. The man who controls her tenure. The man who edits the journal. The man who built an empire on numbers that were never his.
What begins as a rejected manuscript becomes something far more dangerous - an investigation into thirty years of scientific fraud, institutional silence, and systematically destroyed careers. As Noor digs deeper, she discovers she is not the first to challenge Pryce. She is simply the first to survive long enough to build a case.
A former doctoral student, exiled to a fishing town after his dissertation data was deliberately erased. A department administrator carrying her dead mother's evidence in unopened boxes. A whistleblower's letter sealed in an envelope for three decades. A wife who heard the truth at a Christmas party in 1994 and spent thirty years unable to speak it. One by one, the silenced find their way to Noor - and the proof they carry is devastating.
But Pryce is not a man who waits to be accused. His retaliation is surgical, bureaucratic, and deniable: frozen budgets, revoked lab access, manipulated tenure committees, and a protege willing to do whatever it takes to protect the legacy they both depend on. Every move Noor makes is met with an institutional countermove designed to make her look unstable, ungrateful, or unworthy.
The Peer Review is a psychological thriller set in the elite corridors of American academia, where the most dangerous weapons are not guns or knives but budget memos, anonymous reviews, and the quiet machinery of institutional power. It is a story about what happens when a woman with proof goes up against a system built to ensure that proof never sees the light.
In science, peer review is meant to separate truth from ambition. But when the reviewer is the fraud, the process becomes the weapon - and the only defense is the data itself.
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