Hardcover, 507 pages

Spanish language

Published Nov. 19, 2008 by Random House Mondadori, S.A..

ISBN:
978-84-8346-808-1
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3 stars (6 reviews)

Un inquietante thriller sobre el lado oscuro de la ingeniería genética. El autor de Estado de miedo nos sumerge en los aspectos más sombríos de la investigación genética, la especulación farmacéutica y las consecuencias morales de esta nueva realidad. El investigador Henry Kendall mezcla ADN humano y de chimpancé y produce un híbrido extraordinariamente evolucionado al que rescatará del laboratorio y hará pasar como un humano. Tráfico de genes, animales "de diseño", encarnizadas guerras de patentes: un futuro turbador que ya está aquí. Un tema apasionante en el que la realidad supera la ficción. Las consecuencias de la manipulación genética indiscriminada son impredecibles y plantean un debate moral que, sin duda, determinará nuestro futuro inmediato.

30 editions

Muddled but important

3 stars

Doesn't feel like a story at all, more a bunch of thoughts about genetic engineering bundled together. It's like the writer had too many ideas and couldn't choose one to stick to. My main problem with this is that there are just way too many characters, some are important to remember for later and some exist in one chapter and are never heard from again. All characters are unlikeable except for Gerald the parrot. On the positive side, I found this an easy read despite the structure. All his ideas both interesting and horrifyingly possible. Many chapters start with a real-world news article about genetic engineering and at the end of the book is a well thought out list of the real worries about the science and what laws could be changed for the better. In the beginning of the book a man is constantly being given blood tests, he …

Review of 'Next' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

A collection of loosely related short stories clumsily cobbled together.

Good:
Raises valid concerns about genetic engineering and US patent law.

Bad:
Most characters appear morally wrong for no good reason. It detracts from valid criticism of corporate wrongdoers if all characters are adulterers & chauvinists.
Ending is unbelievable.
There's almost no narrative structure to the novel.
* It should have been an essay.

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4 stars
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3 stars