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62 of 63 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars And now for the other side, January 30, 2004
By 
Several books have already covered many aspects of the race to sequence the human genome. These books were either written by outsiders with limitted access or in the case of The Common Thread by an insider from the public human genome project. For the first time this book gives the perspective of someone who had intimate access to the people, premises and meetings at Celera Genomics. As an insider at Celera I can vouch for the accuracy of the events covered in the book that I was present for as well as the spirit of the endeavor captured by this book. While I am undoubtedly biased, I found the quality of the narative for this book to be better than that of its rivals and the content more compelling. Shreeve also covers the concurrent public effort and does a nice job of explaining many of the technical challenges in an understandable fashion, but what is unique to this book is the story from behind the scenes at Celera as well as some in depth descriptions of the people involved. If you are at all interested in the whole story about this moment in history you need to read this book!
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22 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A complex story well told, May 31, 2004
By 
Bosco Ho (San Francisco, USA) - See all my reviews
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This is a ferciously well-written account of the race to map the human genome, one of the most sordid and expensive races in the history of science. Virtually alone amongst the books available out there on the genome race, this book tells the story from the point of view of Craig Venter. Not only that, but James Shreeve had a complete fly-on-the-wall view of the inner workings of Celera, allowing Shreeve to give a full-blooded account of the implosion of Venter's dream, that of becoming the Bill Gates of Biotech.

Shreeve has done the impossible by pulling the threads of this immense story into a tight coherent narrative. At the end of the story, we understand how Venter ended up in the embarassing situation of negociating a so-called "tie" in the race for the human genome. Shreeve has a novelistic eye for detail in painting memorable portraits of the many people involved in the story. The science is vividly introduced when needed, but the complex financial and political moves are also explicated with authority. This is very very good writing.

Although Craig Venter has often been demonized amongst scientific circles, it was always an open question whether Venter was the devil incarnate, or an incredibly naive scientist who made one stupid faustian bargain after another. While there is no doubt that Venter is a brilliant man, Shreeve' account portrays Venter as a financial masochist, a victim of financial forces beyond his understanding.

In the preface, Shreeve explained that he had originally wanted a balanced account of the race as he tried to get access to the head of the public Human Genome Project, Francis Collins. He was refused. Because of that, Shreeve has structured the book as a character study of Venter, where we are privy to all his inner trials and tribulations. From being embedded in the private side of the race, Shreeve introduces a subtle bias in the account. The private researchers at Celera are fun and daring, even glamorous, whereas the public scientists are inefficient, stodgy, yawningly boring white-lab coats, especially when they talk about the ethical stuff. In my experience, it's been the opposite. I know researchers who have come back into academia because industry research was so achingly boring.

One big gripe I have with this book is that Shreeve glides over why the public project was so fixated on trying to keep the map open, free and accessible. Shreeve makes the leaders of the public project sound like shrill ideologues, constantly harping on over some kind of utopian ideal. This subtle bias ignores the heavily documented, though much ignored, literature over the pathological behaviour of the pharmaceutical industry. A commercial monopoly over the human genome would have been a disaster for public health (as opposed to rich men's health), and Celera came close to destroying the fragile consensus in academia science.

Apart from this gripe, I do recommend that you read this book if you want a sophisticated guide to one of the most fascinating collisions between commerical and public science, as well as a superb study of scientific ambition.

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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Pure joy! A science writing masterpiece., March 1, 2004
By 
R. Thompson (Geneva, Switzerland) - See all my reviews
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If you read only one science book this year, it has to be James Shreeve's inside view of the race to sequence the human genome. The story of this tumultuous competition between the prestigious Human Genome Project and the brash visionary Craig Venter is a joy ride. Shreeve's irreverent, charming and ultimately thrilling tale is a masterpiece of science writing. The white coats (and white hats) drop away in this book as Shreeve reveals the majesty of science for what it has always been, a very human story. Bravo!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fascinating and exciting journey!, September 8, 2005
By 
Igor Faynshteyn (Brooklyn, NY United States) - See all my reviews
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Firstly, I haven't even finished this book at the time of my writing this review, but I could no longer wait to comment on it.

The distinguished feature of this book is its style of writing. It is incredibly simple and straight forward, without any unncessary twist of language or logic. Although this is a depiction of the whole story behind the Human Genome Project, it reads like an epic tale of a breathtaking journey.

James Shreeve gives a close account of all the events that led up to sequencing of human genome, including politics, science, business, legal matters and personal relations. What's more, is that a lay reader who understands nothing about gene or molecular biology can learn a whole lot of things he didn't know before. While the book is not technical in biological and other scientific explanations, it is sufficient to explain to the lay reader about genes, their importance as well as their pharamaceutical value.

This book, like other reviewers have mentioned, is truly hard to put down. Highly recommended to everyone!!
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Unveiling the meaning of life, July 2, 2005
This book is a must-read for anyone who wants to understand the future of science, medicine, and technology. Though I have been intrigued with the human genome project and the mapping of other life forms, I had never understood the process or knew the key players in the epic search to do so. James Shreeves' masterful account of this landmark achievement brings the complex and compelling venture into sharp focus. His narrative includes not only colorful and insightful quotes from those involved on all levels, but also offers cogent explanations of the technical and scientific issues in breakthrough biological data-processing that will eventually change all our lives.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Informative and exciting, April 10, 2004
This book has it all: brilliant, extraordinary personalities; big egos and big visions, high stakes political and business maneuvering, scientific breakthroughs and feats of technical virtuosity - all making up a very thrilling and important story. James Shreeve relates a complex history of a monumental scientific achievement in a way that is lucid, engaging, informative and exciting. Once you start this book, it is hard to put down. Craig Venter personal story is incredible and intriguing enough, but there are several other interesting and gifted individuals in both the private and public sector chronicled in the book whose genius, dreams and hard work lead to the mapping of the human genome.
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Stunning! Superlative! Exciting!, July 17, 2005
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I could not put this book down. This is an engrossingly written glimpse into the people, politics and science of the Human Genome project(s). Extraordinarily well done. Uplifting.
Exciting. At times depressing. Full of real people at war with real problems and real results.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Clarification on the Recent Genome Chronology, December 8, 2004
By 
Abstractist (Ventura, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Shreeve did an excellent job digesting and chronicling one of the most tumultuous tales in the development of genetic research and the ensuing commercialization. Although the book painted Venter to be this colorful, herculean maverick who wrestled his way to bring about the DNA coding of multiple organisms, the readers cannot help but cheer when Venter arranged the "annotation jamboree" to help decipher gene functions collaborating with the scientific team from the public sector. As a reader seeing the Genome War through Shreeve's lens, I can see the reason why it would be so easy to love or hate Venter in the public genomic research community. Overall, I believe it was for public good that the war occurred and still on-going, only with different players in the field. This book made it that much easier to track the current trend in biotechnology and the exciting development in RNA and junk DNA research, casting doubt on the "central dogma."
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One big flaw: lack of art, September 27, 2004
By 
David Allison (Tucker, Georgia USA) - See all my reviews
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This is a wonderful book. James Shreeve was granted incredible access and became an eye witness to history.

My only criticism - of the publisher, not Shreeve - is the complete absence of art. There's not a single photo, not a single illustration, not a single diagram, chart or anything else to illustrate the book. This is a serious failing in a book about personalities - people. Wonder what Craig Venter looks like? You won't find out here. How about Francis Collins, Michael Hunkapiller or Tony White? Sorry. It's a pity Shreeve didn't carry a camera as well as a notepad as he followed Venter and witnessed events which will become mythic with the passage of time. Shreeve is masterful in his craft, particularly his use of metaphors to simply and clearly describe complex biological concepts, but this can't excuse the utter absence of documentary photographs for what may well become THE history of the human genome. This is simply incomprehensible.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Scientific journalism at it's best, July 24, 2007
By 
I picked up this book because I realized that I knew next to nothing about the human genome--one of the most significant scientific accomplishments of the century. Shreeve's explanation of what it is and why it matters while describing the dramatic intellectual, technical and commercial competition between the academic community and private venture capitalists--most notably Craig Ventor-- is spellbinding. The most painless way to familiarize yourself with recent human genome research. An outstandiing read.
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The Genome War: How Craig Venter Tried to Capture the Code of Life and Save the World
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