Fountain Society
โ Scribed by Craven, Wes
- Book ID
- 110440924
- Publisher
- Simon & Schuster
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- en-GB
- Weight
- 200 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9780671017248
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
From Publishers Weekly
Craven's first novel, a cloning thriller, isn't quite a clone of John Darnton's recent cloning thriller (The Experiment, Forecasts, July 5), but the two could pass as siblings. Both are by Sunday novelists: Craven is the (in)famous director of such horror film classics as Scream and Nightmare on Elm Street; Darnton edits for the New York Times. Both feature top-secret experiments by mad doctors: here, it's an army-funded program by Dr. Frederick Wolfe that has tampered with nature by growing human duplicates. And in both novels it's the dawning awareness by the clones and their originals of the implications of their situations that generates the primary suspense. But there are differences. Craven is an emotional writer, unlike Darnton, but he lacks the latter's attention to journalistic detail. Craven also writes cinematically, with energetic crosscutting of scenes. His setup depicts the evolving affair of a pair of lovers, model Elizabeth and financier Hans, in Europe, as well as the clandestine superweapons experiments of ailing, aging physicist Peter Jance and his wife, both colleagues of Wolfe, in White Sands. Hans is kidnapped: Wolfe's people have snatched him, for Hans, it's revealed, is Peter's clone. On the Caribbean island of Vieques, Wolfe transplants Peter's brain into Hans's young body, ensuring that Peter's diabolical weapons research will continue. Much of the remainder of the narrative concerns Peter's grappling with his new body and its memories, including recollections of Elizabeth, who makes her way to Vieques, sparking in Peter a reassessment of his marriage and career. The two become lovers. Can they escape Wolfe's clutches? Surging melodrama and rich characters distinguish this novel; one wishes it boasted the clear prose and scientific analysis of the Darnton. Neither book works fully, but the two complement each otherAnot like mirror images but like two halves of one whole. Author tour. (Oct.)
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
Film director Craven, famous for his "Nightmare on Elm Street" series, takes a stab at thriller-writingAwith considerable success. Dr. Peter Jance, a brilliant physicist on the verge of developing the ultimate weapon for the U.S. government, is suffering from pancreatic cancer and is in danger of dying before he completes his task. The solution may lie with Dr. Frederick Wolfe, the master of the super-secret military-sponsored Fountain SocietyAas in "fountain of youth." (My god: what if scientific geniuses could live forever?) What follows is a wickedly clever tale of genetic experimentation and human cloning, international military intrigue, mad-scientist wizardry, and evil secret intelligence that would be right at home in The X-Files. That Craven can make all of this believable is a testament to his writing skill; the "master of the macabre" has a winner that will appeal to Allan Folsom fans. Recommended for all fiction collections.
-ARebecca House Stankowski, Purdue Univ. Calumet Lib., Hammond, IN
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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EDITORIAL REVIEW: *As a film director, Wes Craven gave you nightmares and made you scream. As a novelist, he'll thrill you with a shocking tale born in cutting-edge science and bred in eternal fear.* Hope for an ingenious superweapon is dying as physicist Peter Jance's health fails. But with o
EDITORIAL REVIEW: *As a film director, Wes Craven gave you nightmares and made you scream. As a novelist, he'll thrill you with a shocking tale born in cutting-edge science and bred in eternal fear.* Hope for an ingenious superweapon is dying as physicist Peter Jance's health fails. But with o
### From Publishers Weekly Craven's first novel, a cloning thriller, isn't quite a clone of John Darnton's recent cloning thriller (The Experiment, Forecasts, July 5), but the two could pass as siblings. Both are by Sunday novelists: Craven is the (in)famous director of such horror film classics as