
That is what Raphael Jacquerye in Hunger magicians: a city was created in the depths of the Amazon rainforest. Babylon. Maintained in secrecy, the purpose of its founding intrigue nonetheless. She is known for people to hand-picked, but the criteria are still difficult to know, too well they are camouflaged by the initiator of the project, the scientist Harry Pimentel. Yet we quickly understand the role of genetic modification in the selection of the Babylonians. Pimentel seems determined to eradicate aggression, natural process no longer necessary for the survival of mankind. But perhaps more. The large-scale project will eventually open its doors, but the results are rather surprising.
While in parallel, another scientist acrobat genes creates a medium that will enthrall crowds, ethical, anthropological, metaphysical and others, are going well. How far this "normalization" of the genetic modification can it go?
A story idea intriguing, challenging, but whose implementation is a bit disappointing. It is actually very interesting to develop a novel because of questions about the meaning of the indication of aberration or the boundaries of genetic modification. However, construction of the narrative serves its foundation. Many repetitions, a few commonplaces, and tools sometimes a bit awkward. One senses the author's knowledge and his desire to popularize a slippery slope of scientific news, but the novel as such lacks a little something that could make more hardliner.
A good pen, however, led me in the footsteps of his first novel, Storm the Vatican, which seems to be a precursor advised the Da Vinci Code. In more credible, no doubt? To discover.
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