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Frankenstein's Cat

Cuddling Up to Biotech's Brave New Beasts

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Dolly the Sheep was just the start. Meet the high-tech menagerie of the near future, as scientists reinvent the animal kingdom
From the petri dish to the pet shop, meet the high-tech menagerie of the near future, as humans reinvent the animal kingdom
Fluorescent fish that glow near pollution. Dolphins with prosthetic fins. Robot-armoured beetles that military handlers can send on spy missions. Beloved pet pigs resurrected from DNA. Scientists have already begun to create these high-tech hybrids to serve human whims and needs. What if a cow could be engineered to no longer feel pain – should we design a herd that would assuage our guilt over eating meat?

Acclaimed science writer Emily Anthes travels round the globe to meet the fauna of the future, from the Scottish birthplace of Dolly the sheep and other clones to a 'pharm' for cancer-fighting chickens. Frankenstein's Cat is an eye-opening exploration of weird science – and how we are playing god in the animal world.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 24, 2012
      Animals are fascinating if reluctant soldiers in the biotech revolution, writes journalist Anthes (Instant Egghead Guide: The Mind) in this witty and thought-provoking book. Scientists, it turns out, have produced cyborg cockroaches, genetically altered mice whose brains we can control, and goats that express commercial drugs in their milk. Bizarre, to be sure, but undoubtedly beneficial: animals play a crucial role in the development of myriad products that make life better for humans. But what about the creatures’ quality of life? Many decry the use of animals in experiments (though Anthes points out that Americans spend $300 billion “every year eating animal flesh”), yet even Charles Darwin, a staunch opponent of animal cruelty, refused to “condemn invasive animal research.” Still, that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t strive to make that invasion less intrusive. Anthes argues that we are making our way through the ethical thicket. Ever-tinier microprocessors, receivers, and batteries let us tag and track “an ever-expanding menagerie of marine and terrestrial species,” from seals to bees and the currents and winds they travel on. Anthes is optimistic we will “use our scientific superpowers wisely” to make life better for both the “creatures that live in scientific labs and those that run them.” Agent: Abigail Koons, Park Literary Group.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 30, 2013
      Anthes tours the intersection of the animal kingdom and human sciences, showing different examples of how humans are reshaping animal life for good, questionable, and trivial purposes. From reproducing and reprograming genes to creating animal prosthetics, Anthes reveals the curious ways humans have come to use and support animal lives with little regard for the consequence of their actions. Narrator Hillary Huber turns in a mixed performance. While she can imbue her narration with tone and personality, she also reads with a nasally projection that feels removed. Despite this performance, the combination of narration and content will keep listeners engaged throughout the production. An FSG/Scientific American hardcover.

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Languages

  • English

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