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The Genesis Shield
 
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The Genesis Shield [Paperback]

Steven Spruill (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

December 1993
Vandiver, a scientist at a government lab, is assigned to devise a serum to protect humans from nuclear radiation, but instead of inventing his own he steals that of his best friend, with terrifying consequences. Reissue.

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 374 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Books (December 1993)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0812535081
  • ISBN-13: 978-0812535082
  • Product Dimensions: 6.7 x 4.1 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,415,900 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

1968: Andrews University. Graduated with B.A. in biology.
1969: Married Nancy Lyon

1969-1974: Hazleton Laboratories. Laboratory technician, technical writer.

1974-1981: The Catholic University.
While studying for a doctorate in clinical psychology, Spruill sold his first novel, Keepers of the Gate, to Doubleday in 1976. Five more of his novels were published while he completed graduate school. During this period, Spruill also served as an adjunct professor at Catholic University, teaching creative writing to students in the drama program at Catholic U. In 1980, Spruill completed his doctoral dissertation on Creativity, and was awarded the Ph.D. in clinical psychology in 1981.

1981-present: After completing a year's internship at Mount Vernon Hospital in Virginia, Spruill turned to writing, full time. Fifteen of his novels, two novellas, and one non-fiction book have been published by Doubleday, Playboy Press, St. Martin's Press, TOR, Berkley, and Dell. His pseudonyms include Steve Morgan (UK), Steve Lyon, and Steven Harriman (Berkley). His work has sold in over twenty foreign countries. Several of his novels were selections of The Literary Guild and the Doubleday Book Club. Three of his medical thrillers were condensed in Good Housekeeping Magazine and one in Reader's Digest Books. Both Kirkus and Publishers Weekly have awarded starred reviews to his novels. Spruill's novel Rulers of Darkness was nominated for the British Fantasy Award. It was this novel that, in 1995, coined the term "Hemophage" to describe the "reality" behind the vampire myth. In 1995, the Catholic University of America conferred upon Spruill its award for "Outstanding Achievement in the Field of Literature." Other recipients of this award in the arts include Susan Sarandon and Jon Voight.

 

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars He never uses the "Z" word..., October 26, 2007
By 
Khavrinen (Vancouver, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Genesis Shield (Paperback)
Because what Steven Spruill is attempting in this novel is to explore a possible scientific hypothesis that would explain a phenomenon usually only addressed by schlocky, not-to-be-taken-seriously horror movies, he assiduously avoids any use whatsoever of the word "zombie", but that is basically what this novel is about. At least I think that is what most people would call those who have died, but then rise up to walk again without actually quite being "alive" again.

Although I read comparatively few horror novels, so I can't say if this is better than the average one about zombies, I thought it was superior to the characterization in the movies I've seen, in that it addressed a couple of things that they don't. For one thing, in most of the movies the creation of the undead usually either "just happens" ( i.e., "Night of the Living Dead" ), or is brought about by some faceless, indefinite medical lab ( "28 Days Later", "Resident Evil" ). In "The Genesis Shield" the main character, Dr. Peter Morrissey, is the one who created the serum that causes it, and is horribly frustrated and helpless when circumstances rip it out of his control, and Spruill makes you feel how personally devastated he is.

For another, in most movies the fear and dread comes from having these things coming at you that seem unstoppable, because they are already dead. I think it would be very difficult for a movie to convey, as I feel this book does successfully, the horror of "waking up" after you had died and remembering what it was to be human, but being trapped inside your own corpse, unable to "move on" or to stop yourself from acting like a zombie -- even if that means killing those who were your best friends.

Read today, this novel ( written in the early '80s ) feels oddly nostalgic, harkening back to the days when America's greatest fear was the nuclear threat of Soviet Russia, but all in all I think it is relatively well done for what it is, and worth a read if you can track down a copy.


From the back cover:

Washington's Dulles Airport--
Inside a darkened van, unaware that his conversation is being monitored, an agent of _Voyevoda_, Russia's super-secret intelligence service, sets a plan in motion that will leave America a radioactive wasteland...in only twenty-five days!

Ridgetown Research Center--
Deep in the heart of this fortress-like Army radiobiology lab, a frantic search for America's salvation has produced an extraordinary solution: Dr. Peter Morrissey has created L-6 -- the Genesis Shield -- a serum that not only neutralizes the effect of nuclear fallout, but prolongs human life!

L-6 has one devastating side effect. And before Morrissey can warn the nation of its horrifying secret, the serum becomes a deadly tool in a reckless bid for power. With doomsday drawing ever closer, Morrissey must risk his family, sanity, and survival -- to expose a friend now transformed into a fiendish enemy, and stop his creation from altering the human race forever...
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