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3 Reviews
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Great taste LESS filling...,
This review is from: The Craving (Paperback)
This is yet another in a series of books I have encountered recently where the blurb on the back cover tells a great story...that is nowhere to be found Inside the book.
This is being marketed as sort of a disaster book, where the impression given is that, because of a nutritional suppliment, people are going nuts trying to get and eat food - and the back cover hints of darker urges too. Which is great and why I bought it. In fairness, it is about people eating themselves to death, but the whole thing is kept low key and not anyplace Near what the cover or blurbs implied. Instead we get a few hundred pages of Very Weak "poor man's Robin Cook". Nothing really HAPPENS, and then it ends on a low key with not much resolved and nobody really having any thing eventful happen to them. On the good side, it Does have a few character twists going for it, amid a sea of cardboard, Doctor Wren, the founder and inventor (sort of) of the suppliment is well written in his decent into The Craving...but the rest of the characters could have been supplied by Hollywood central casting. If I could have given this book 1 1/2 stars I would have - as it is 2 is being generous. If you are seeking a disaster or nature with people gone amuck story as this one is marketed under - keep looking. If ya want a weak medical "thriller" (with a predictable romance thrown in, uhm, limply) then by all means grab it.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The Craving Captures the Desperate Feelings of the Overweigh,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Craving (Paperback)
THE CRAVING by Arthur Herzog is a book that captures the desperate feelings of the overweight, who cannot, even with steely determination, lose the flab and bulk. Some become suicidal. It is no wonder that people like Dr. William C. Wren come along, offering a panacea---a product called Sovwren to help them lose weight, one that can make a fortune.Herzog presents a behild the scenes look at the industries that spring up to aid the afflicted.Dr. Wren and his silent partner Macdonald run a far-flung weight loss empire and wrest huge profits from it. This wealth requires an off shore bank account--one that enables them to pay for private jets, expensive cars, and beautiful women. Visits to Dr. Wren cost $200 and $75 after that. Most appointments are ten minutes twice a week. Time spent at Wren's fabulous spa, Slenderosa, costs five figures a week. In a plausible plot, Herzog describes a weight loss product from the goomie plant that does not come without side effects ( not unlike the ephedra plant). In this fictional narration, users of the weight loss product are faced with a feeding frenzy, one that could become a national epidemic. Will an antidote be found in time to save thousands of lives--including Dr. Wren's? There is one good guy amongst the greedy businessmen and it is the son-in-law of Dr. Wren--Dr Andy Larsen--a medical researcher. He has come up with a brilliant solution to halt the epidemic. But, with his life threatened, he may not be able to finish it in time. Murder and mayhem abound. THE CRAVING has a surprise ending, which I will not give away. It is a suspenseful read ( and extremely well researched by Herzog). I enjoyed it.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Chilling what if really was ahead of its time.,
By
This review is from: The Craving (Paperback)
Considering the current fascination with nutrition, dieting, and eating disorders this 1982 novel by speculative suspense writer Arthur Herzog (The Swarm, Heat, and Earthsound) needs to be rediscovered and widely read. A new dietary supplement, Sovren, has an unforseen side effect...it makes its users uncontrollably hungry. When they begin literally eating themselves to death trying to satiate a hunger that will not fade, the corporate powers that be want the facts buried. Meanwhile the doctor who invented the miracle weight loss shake falls victim to it himself in a classic Frankenstein twist.Although Herzog had his weaknesses as a writer, namely having a deus ex machina parked in each of his story's garage, he was a master at the slow burn terror. Hints and clues build atop each other as the inevitable fallout gathers. A memorable book worth seeking out by medical suspense lovers everywhere. |
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The Craving by Arthur Herzog (Paperback - Nov. 1982)
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