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Twenty-five years after Donovan's Brain -- now a classic of science
fiction -- came a superb new novel from the pen of Curt Siodmak.
Once again the author probed the horizons of scientific endeavour
in an extraordinary story which blended science fiction with
international intrigue. An once again he featured D. Patrick Cory,
the biochemist who figures in Donovan's Brain.
Cory, the world's leading authority on RNA (ribonucleic aid) the
brain substance in which memory is stored -- is approached by the
CIA and asked to conduct a weird and dangerous experiment: to
remove the RNA from Hauser, a dying German scientist who has
defected from the Russians, and inject it into another man in the
hope of releasing the German's secrets. At first, Cory is appalled.
But Slaughter, the CIA man, has thought of everything -- even to
providing a suitable 'subject' for the bizarre experiment.
The experiment succeeds -- but to an extent which neither Cory
nor Slaughter could anticipate. For it is not only Hauser's memory
that is transferred. With it go his obsessions, his dreams, his
emotions, his character...gradually, insidiously. And there begins
the bitter struggle as Hauser's memory tries to posses its new mind
-- the mind of a man who is acutely aware of what is happening to
him. The dead German's monomaniacal quest for vengeance -- that
soon involves security elements from both East and West in a
thrilling international chase -- and the final chilling
confrontation between the man possessed by Hauser and the object of
Hauser's search combine to make an enthralling, suspenseful and
utterly credible science fiction novel which is a fitting successor
to Donovan's Brain.
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