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Day of the Dandelion: An Arthur Hemmings Mystery (Arthur Hemmings Mysteries)
 
 
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Day of the Dandelion: An Arthur Hemmings Mystery (Arthur Hemmings Mysteries) [Hardcover]

Peter Pringle (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Arthur Hemmings Mysteries May 22, 2007
Seeds of a new corn plant are stolen from Oxford University's botany lab, and the professor, Alastair Scott, and his Russian assistant, Tanya Petrovskaya, are missing.

Alarms ring in London and Washington, where intelligence officials know that Scott was working on a supergene that could allow control over the world's entire food supply.

The British government calls in Arthur Hemmings from the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew. To his coworkers, Hemmings is just another researcher in the herbarium, but for many years he has been a secret service agent, an outwardly rumpled but dashing covert adventurer.

Officials see a Moscow plot. Has Scott been kidnapped? Is he dead? Have Scott and Tanya fled to Russia? And why is Oxford's vice-chancellor withholding vital information?

The intrepid Hemmings follows a series of clues into the cutthroat world of international patents, where the hunt for priceless genes is always nasty and often deadly.

In Arthur Hemmings, Pringle has created an original heartbreaker of a hero, a botanist detective with a dash of James Bond. Facing murderous threats, Hemmings investigates fearlessly and with devastating precision. Handsome, witty, an ambitious cook, and a wine lover, he is irresistible to a much younger American female researcher.

Day of the Dandelion is a seductive modern hybrid of the thrillers of Graham Greene and the adventure novels of Ian Fleming, filled with political, scientific, and commercial intrigue, and laced with miracle plants, deadly toxins, kidnappings, and car chases. It will keep the reader in suspense and amused from prelude to postscript.

--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Pringle puts what he learned in writing Food, Inc.: Mendel to Monsanto—The Promises and Perils of the Biotech Harvest (2003) to good use in his promising fiction debut, the first of a new botanical thriller series. His tough, shrewd hero, Arthur Hemmings, works as a researcher at the Royal Botanic Gardens, but is also a spy for the British Secret Service, which sends him after a greedy multinational corporation that has nasty plans to take over the world's food supply by using the single-sexed dandelion as its instrument. Sure, some of the prose is stiff and stodgy ("He was a nice man, she knew, a nice, considerate, widowed man who had several grandchildren of his own, and who had no idea that what was about to occur on his watch could so change both their worlds"), and Hemmings occasionally comes across as too good to be true, but these are small details in a brilliant concept. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In this entertaining thriller, the theft of some seeds at an Oxford University botanical laboratory nearly results in some decidedly bad guys gaining monopolistic control of the world's food supply. Journalist Pringle gives a contemporary threat an old-fashioned overlay with his introduction of a hero with strong whiffs of Holmesian Victoriana clinging to him: Arthur Hemmings is a gentleman detective, a middle-aged (but sexy) botanist at Royal Botanic Gardens by day and an agent (spy) for the Office of Food Security whenever a threat is spotted. The current threat comes from the race to find a gene that controls plant reproduction--first to come up with the gene can rule the world food supply. A professor and his lab assistant both disappear from the lab, with the quick reappearance of the prof floating face down in the Thames. Intriguing forensic botany, exciting action, with a somewhat hokey but still entertaining hero. Connie Fletcher
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster (May 22, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 141654075X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1416540755
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 6.1 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,261,642 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A new area of skulduggery, June 11, 2007
By 
John Barry (chevy chase, md USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Day of the Dandelion: An Arthur Hemmings Mystery (Arthur Hemmings Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Author Peter Pringle has pulled off a neat trick, I think. With Arthur Hemmings, undercover agent at the world-famous Kew Gardens in London, Pringle takes us into what is, sofar as I know, a wholly new field of skulduggery: the multi-billion dollar world of agribizz. Pringle's previous book, Food Inc, was a well-researched study of the rise of the giant agricultural conglomerates and the risks that poses --- especially, their growing control of plant strains. Pringle puts that knowledge to good use here. Hemmings is on an international hunt for a stolen supergene that could revolutionise the world's food supply --- thus reaping a fortune for whoever owned the patent. The yarn is more nearly English detective story than thriller, though the opening chapters are genuinely tense; and Pringle's cool and literate prose comes as a relief after the overheated offerings we can all recall. The deeper pleasure of the book, though, is its fascinating induction into an area of science wholly new, at any rate to me. Never heard of apomixis ? I hadn't either. But read this and you begin to grasp, painlessly, the science and commerce of modern big-money agribizz. I was enthralled. Who knew ?
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining, but Not That Thrilling, June 6, 2007
This review is from: Day of the Dandelion: An Arthur Hemmings Mystery (Arthur Hemmings Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Veteran British journalist Pringle is probably best known for his last book, Food, Inc., which explores the role of biotechnology and multinational corporations in the global food chain. That topic is given a fictional quasi-thriller treatment here, as we meet 50ish Arthur Hemmings, expert botanist at Kew Gardens and undercover agent for the OFS (Office of Food Security, a fictional British government agency which does have a real-life American equivalent). When several packets of seeds are stolen from the safe of an eminent Oxford researcher, Hemmings is put on the case by some typically noxious bureaucrats. Both the researcher and his assistant are missing, and it's possible the seeds may hold the key to "apomixis" -- a kind of Holy Grail of plant genetics that would allow hybrid plants to clone themselves. This would theoretically enable the stable production of uberhigh-yield genetically enhanced crops, and open up other possibilities, such as cost-effective biofuel. Soon, the researcher turns up dead, and Hemmings must consider a plethora of possible suspects, including the Russians, Chinese, CIA, and multinational food conglomerate Panrustica. As Hemmings explains several times, whomever decodes the apomixis process and is able to patent it will essentially be able to control the global food supply.

One of the story's minor flaws is that it's never explained how ownership of the apomixis process would lead directly to one nation or company controlling the world's food. Clearly it would enable a distinct competitive advantage, in terms of being able to make more raw materials at a lower cost, as well as being able to genetically engineer various plants as medicine delivery systems and the like. But there's already a good deal resistance in many parts of the world to genetically modified crops, and moreover, despite the WTO, it seems likely that a large part of the world wouldn't respect a patent with such a comprehensive monopolizing effect. Nonetheless, Pringle does a good job at showing how the current international patent system could be abused in such a manner. One of the key plot elements is the dead researcher's desire to make the apomixis process "open source", so that the whole world could benefit.

More problematically, at least for a book that aspires to be a thriller, is that it's never all that thrilling. It's certainly very readable and enjoyable as a light entertainment, but Hemmings is never given much of a challenge. To be sure, he has to do a fair amount of sleuthing and running hither and yon (mainly London to Zurich and back), and there's a car chase and minor bar brawl. But he's always got old friends and expert pals who help him out with key resources, or is able to meet and charm helpful people (such as reporters and little old ladies) along the way. With his vintage sportscar, first-class airline travel, ultra-efficient female assistant, good physique for his age, and good-natured charm, he seems modeled to a large degree on the movie version of James Bond. Alas, unlike Bond, he is never given a true villain to battle. Early on, the reader is introduced to a particularly odious and cunning lawyer who seems destined to be his nemesis, but that character simply disappears, leaving Hemmings little in the way of opposition.

Again, this is not to say it's a bad or unenjoyable book, merely that it's lacking in certain elements that would make it much much stronger. The notion of a botanical supersleuth has possibilities, and Hemmings is a potentially interesting character, but he has it all too easy -- hopefully his next adventure to save the world will be a little more dangerous and thrilling.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Mastery on First Try, May 15, 2007
This review is from: Day of the Dandelion: An Arthur Hemmings Mystery (Arthur Hemmings Mysteries) (Hardcover)
Peter Pringle built a brilliant journalistic career unearthing the harsh realities of our world. But could Pringle glide into a new role of master story-teller? Day of the Dandelion yields a triumphant answer. Pringle's protagonist, Arthur Hemmings, offers wry entertainment and real education in equal doses, and readers will eagerly await his further adventures.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
physic gardens, tom franklin, apomixis research, chromosome ratios, stolen seeds
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Miss Richards, Sir Freddie, Karen Lichfield, Professor Scott, Matt Raskin, Fred Barton, Professor Goodhart, Lower Witton, Richard Eikel, Tanya Petrovskaya, Lyme Regis, Kew Gardens, Marc Haber, Alastair Scott, Inspector Davenport, Arthur Hemmings, Captain Wilford, Squitchey Lane, Tunbridge Wells, Cold War, New York, Edward Dalton, Queen's Lock, Limmat Bar, Merrill Davies
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