THE IMMORTALITY FACTOR by Ben Bova
Book Quote:
Does Habermeir know you’ve asked me to look into his work? I asked…I didn’t like stepping on the toes of other scientists in the Omnitech family. But I needed Johnston’s support for my own programs and to keep the support I had to keep the CEO happy. Politics. There was no way around it, you had to be good at politics to get to do the science you wanted to do.
Still, I couldn’t help muttering, “How can you expect anything but trouble, dealing with radioactive material?”
Johnston fixed me with a stern gaze. “There’s a lot of money to be made in cleaning up nuclear wastes. And it’s a good thing to do, Arthur. You’re always telling me we should be doing good things, aren’t you?”
Book Review:
Review by Ann Wilkes (Dec 29, 2009)
The Immortality Factor was first published in 1996 as Brothers. It is now presented, according to Bova, not as a science fiction novel, but as a contemporary novel. Due to advancements in the field of cellular regeneration, it is no longer science fiction.
The novel begins a little slow – with a trial that plays out between flashbacks throughout the story. The trial is conducted in a newly devised Science Court, established with the express purpose of determining the validity of the protagonist’s line of research. In spite of his objections and the Court’s original intent, the prosecutor continually brings up peripheral matters: Which brother’s idea was this growing of new organs and limbs? What about the lab’s scientist who died? What about stem cells and the babies who have to die to provide them?
The trial gains momentum as the characters’ individual dramas unfold. Arthur Marshak is a scientist who was drummed out of academia and is set on winning a Nobel Prize from his commercial lab in lower Connecticut. His brother, Jesse, married Arthur’s former fiancé, understandably trashing the brothers’ relationship.
“Julia, it isn’t right for Jess to drag you off to these places. They’re dangerous.”
Very patiently, Julia replied, “As I’ve told you before, Arthur, dear, he’s not dragging me anywhere. I want to go. I want to be able to help him, to help those poor miserable people. I couldn’t remain here while he’s off in the bush somewhere risking his life.”
…”Stay here where it’s safe,” I said, meaning, Stay with me.
“No,” Julia said, as if she knew precisely what I meant. “No, I really can’t, Arthur. My place is beside Jess, wherever he goes, whatever he does.”
Worse still, Jesse initially suggests the possibility of regenerating organs and limbs only to oppose the project in the Science Court. The Immortality Factor may be a glimpse into the inner circle of modern scientists, but the driving force is the novel’s characters. Bova makes the reader care about their fates – and not just the protagonist’s. I was invested in all of the major characters whom Bova gave voice to in short chapters from their own point of view.
Buffeting Arthur about are: the possibility of a hostile corporate takeover, the love he still feels for his brother’s wife, religious and political opposition, office politics and two other women who have set their sights on him. Though Arthur is a bit self-absorbed and single-minded, you’ll want to see him succeed, if not in winning that Nobel Prize or in saving paraplegics, at least to become a happy man.
| AMAZON READER RATING: | |
| PUBLISHER: | Tor Science Fiction (December 29, 2009) |
| REVIEWER: | Ann Wilkes |
| AVAILABLE AS A KINDLE BOOK? | YES! Start Reading Now! |
| AUTHOR WEBSITE: | Ben Bova |
| EXTRAS: | Excerpt |
| MORE ON MOSTLYFICTION: | Read our review of:
Our interview with Ben Bova on MARS LIFE
|
Bibliography:
- The Weathermakers (1967)
- Out of the Sun (1968)
- Escape! (1969)
- THX 1138 (1971) (with George Lucas)
- As on a Darkling Plain (1972)
- When the Sky Burned (1972)
- Gremlins, Go Home! (1974) (with Gordon R. Dickson)
- The Starcrossed (1975)
- City of Darkness (1976)
- Millenium (1976)
- The Multiple Man (1967)
- Colony (1978)
- Kinsman (1981)
- Test of Fire (1982)
- The Winds of Altair (1983)
- Privateers (1985) (features Dan Randolph, but is not a Grand Tour novel)
- The Kinsman Saga (1987)
- Peacekeepers (1988)
- Cyberbooks (1989)
- The Trikon Deception (1992) (with Bill Pogue)
- Triumph (1993)
- Death Dream 1994)
- Brothers (1996) (released as The Immortality Factor (2009)
- The Green Trap (2006)
- Able One (2010)
- Hittite (2010)
- Power Play (2012)
Watchmen
- The Star Conquerors (1959)
- Star Watchman (1964)*
- The Dueling Machine (1969)
Exile Series:
- Exiled from Earth (1971)
- Flight of Exiles (1972)
- End of Exile (1975)
- The Exiles Trilogy (2011)
Voyagers
- Voyagers (1981)
- The Alien Within (1986)
- Star Brothers (1990)
- The Return (August 2009)
Orion
- Orion (1984)
- Vengeance of Orion (1988)
- Orion in the Dying Time (1990)
- Orion and the Conqueror (1994)
- Orion Among the Stars (1995)
- Orion and King Arthur (June 2013)
To Save the Sun
- To Save the Sun (1992) (with AJ Austin)
- To Fear the Light (1994) (with AJ Austin)
Grand Tour of the Universe:
- Mars (1992)
- Empire Builders (1993)
- Return to Mars (1999)
- Venus (2000)
- Jupiter (2001)
- Saturn (2002)
- Tales of the Grand Tour (2004)
- Mercury (2005)
- Powersat (2005)
- Titan (2006)
- Mars Life (2008)
- Leviathans of Jupiter (2011)
Moonrise (part of Grand Tour):
Asteroid Wars (part of Grand Tour):
- The Precipice (2001)
- The Rock Rats (2002)
- The Silent War (2004)
- The Aftermath (2007)
Sam Gunn (part of Grand Tour):
- Sam Gunn, Unlimited (1993)
- Sam Gunn Forever (1998)
- Sam Gunn Omnibus (2009)
Nonfiction:
- The Craft of Writing Fiction That Sells (1994)
- The Story of Light (2002)
Related:
December 29, 2009
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Judi Clark ·
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Tags: Ben Bova, Courtroom Drama, Interview, Near Future, Sciences · Posted in: Speculative (Beyond Reality)

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