Gravity
Tess Gerritsen
Pocket Books, 338 pages
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Popular medical suspense author Tess Gerritsen turns in another absorbing yarn.
When one of the astronauts aboard the International Space Station falls suddenly ill, it never occurs to Emma Watson,
the station's medical doctor, that anything more than ordinary sickness is involved--despite the man's bizarre
and alarming symptoms, which include wracking convulsions and hemorrhages in both eyes.
But when the crew of the space shuttle sent to retrieve the body for autopsy begins to show identical symptoms,
it becomes clear that some kind of virulent, unknown infection is involved. Hemorrhagic fever is suspected--but
no form of hemorrhagic fever causes the victims' bodies to burst open and spill out big clusters of neon-green
eggs. Soon the Space Station astronauts are also infected. One by one, they die horrifying deaths. At last only
Emma is left, sick but still alive.
Meanwhile, on the ground, Emma's estranged husband Jack--once an astronaut himself, now grounded by a medical condition--has
been frantically working with his former NASA colleagues to try and figure out the pathology of what appears to
be a deadly microbe. But is it? The Department of Defense, which has abruptly co-opted the investigation, seems
to think it might be something else, possibly extra-terrestrial. They want to contain the threat by allowing Emma
to die in space. Jack refuses to accept this. Defying the government, abandoning NASA regulations, he embarks on
a desperate quest to save his wife.
To a selection of basic thriller ingredients--a plucky heroine, a conflicted hero, sinister defense projects, government
coverups, and a lot of amazing coincidences--Gerritsen adds convincing genetic and medical elements and an authentic
picture of the U.S. space program, crafting an absorbing novel of biological suspense. If Gravity doesn't
have quite the depth of a Crichton or the complexity of a Cook, it's still an excellent adventure. The tightly-constructed
plot spins forward at a breakneck pace, and the progress of the outbreak, rendered in cinematic detail, is fascinatingly
horrific. Especially good are the descriptions of life aboard the Space Station, which read with the authority
of first-hand experience--an impressive testament to Gerritsen's research.
A few of the amazing coincidences are a bit too amazing: the accidental death of the One Person Who Knows the Cure
(in the process of rushing off to save the day), the just-in-time launch of an experimental spacecraft (the minute
it appears in the narrative, apparently unrelated to the main story, you know exactly why it's there). But these
minor flaws don't diminish the fun of a very entertaining read. Fans of bio-thrillers will snap this up, and beg
for more.
Copyright © 1999 Victoria Strauss
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