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Reaper by Ben Mezrich β€” book cover
Body, Mind & Health - Fiction, Thrillers, High Tech and Hard Science Fiction

Reaper

by Ben Mezrich, Stephen Lang
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Overview

In Boston, nine lawyers on a conference call suddenly convulse with pain, turn chalk white, and die. In Vermont, a young woman watching her favorite sticom meets the same grisly fate, as do a group of sewer workers in Washington, D.C., while watching a basketball game. Whatever is killing theses people is spreading fast, and the task of eradicating it falls to a most unlikely pair--youthful virologist Samantha Craig and paramedic Nick Barnes, whose brilliant surgical career was ruined by a crippling hand injury.

When Nick and Samantha discover that the virus, named Reaper, spreads through TV's and PC's they realise that the information superhighway will become a killing field with tens of millions dead unless they can root Reaper out. Their search employs a dazzilng array of actual wizardry, from mylar body paint to stealth helicopters, and leads them to a suavely megalomaniacal up-from-the-slums high-tech billionaire, an icily ingenious female programmer, and a high-powered cabal that will do anything to "save" us from technology...even if that means killing us all.

Synopsis

In Boston, nine lawyers on a conference call suddenly convulse with pain, turn chalk white, and die. In Vermont, a young woman watching her favorite sticom meets the same grisly fate, as do a group of sewer workers in Washington, D.C., while watching a basketball game. Whatever is killing theses people is spreading fast, and the task of eradicating it falls to a most unlikely pair--youthful virologist Samantha Craig and paramedic Nick Barnes, whose brilliant surgical career was ruined by a crippling hand injury.

When Nick and Samantha discover that the virus, named Reaper, spreads through TV's and PC's they realise that the information superhighway will become a killing field with tens of millions dead unless they can root Reaper out.

Publishers Weekly

The idea of an electronic killer virus that travels over a nationwide fiberoptic network jump-starts this new thriller by Mezrich, whose first book, Threshold, prompted People to liken him to Michael Crichton. But Reaper quickly loses steam under pedestrian prose and a barrage of characters cloned from other medical thrillers. Nick Barnes, a paramedic whose promising career as a heart surgeon was ended by a crippling hand injury, is called to a bizarre scene. Nine lawyers from a top Boston firm have been found dead in a conference room, their bodies bleached white and horribly contorted. A virus is suspected, which brings into the picture the gorgeous Dr. Samantha Craig, ostensibly an investigator with the Centers for Disease Control but really attached to a secret U.S. Army unit created to deal with killer bugs like the Ebola virus. Nick has a problem dealing with authority. He also lost his wife to AIDS (from a blood transfusion), so he knows a thing or two about viruses. Samantha had a much-loved, rebellious brother who died breaking rules; but she decides to let unruly Nick into her investigation and eventually into her life. Meanwhile, African American entrepreneur Marcus Teal, whose giant Telecon Industries has already put Microsoft's Bill Gates out of business, is getting ready to throw the switch on a system that will link every home in America to his new fiberoptic television network. We know very early that Teal's enigmatic assistant, Melora Parkridge, is behind the electronic virus, but it takes Nick and Samantha so long to catch up that turning the pages becomes a major effort.

About the Author, Ben Mezrich

Ben Mezrich has published ten books, including the New York Times bestseller Bringing Down the House (now a Sony picture starring Kevin Spacey). He is a columnist for Boston Common and a contributor for Flush magazine (London). He lives in Boston, Massachusetts.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

The idea of an electronic killer virus that travels over a nationwide fiberoptic network jump-starts this new thriller by Mezrich, whose first book, Threshold, prompted People to liken him to Michael Crichton. But Reaper quickly loses steam under pedestrian prose and a barrage of characters cloned from other medical thrillers. Nick Barnes, a paramedic whose promising career as a heart surgeon was ended by a crippling hand injury, is called to a bizarre scene. Nine lawyers from a top Boston firm have been found dead in a conference room, their bodies bleached white and horribly contorted. A virus is suspected, which brings into the picture the gorgeous Dr. Samantha Craig, ostensibly an investigator with the Centers for Disease Control but really attached to a secret U.S. Army unit created to deal with killer bugs like the Ebola virus. Nick has a problem dealing with authority. He also lost his wife to AIDS (from a blood transfusion), so he knows a thing or two about viruses. Samantha had a much-loved, rebellious brother who died breaking rules; but she decides to let unruly Nick into her investigation and eventually into her life. Meanwhile, African American entrepreneur Marcus Teal, whose giant Telecon Industries has already put Microsoft's Bill Gates out of business, is getting ready to throw the switch on a system that will link every home in America to his new fiberoptic television network. We know very early that Teal's enigmatic assistant, Melora Parkridge, is behind the electronic virus, but it takes Nick and Samantha so long to catch up that turning the pages becomes a major effort.

Library Journal

Mezrich (Threshold, LJ 5/1/96) combines two currently hot topics, the Internet and killer viruses, in his new novel. Telecon Industries is about to revolutionize the information superhighway. Its Set-Top Boxes, provided free of charge to every household in America, will connect each television and personal computer to one all-encompassing network. Television programs on demand, interactive software, network banking, and more will be available in every homeunless, of course, a deadly computer virus that travels through the network's fiber-optic lines kills everyone first. Nick Barnes, a paramedic who was a surgeon before an accident destroyed one of his hands, and Samantha Craig, a supermodel-gorgeous scientist employed by U.S. Army Medical Research Institute for Infectious Diseases, have fewer than three days to determine the origin of the virus before The Big Turn On, the event that will activate Telecon's computer network. Despite its somewhat plausible premise, Reaper never quite rings true because of its unbelievable characters and impossible situations. Not a necessary purchase. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/1/97.]Melissa Rockicki, NYPL

Book Details

Published
February 1, 2006
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Format
MP3 Book
ISBN
9780061140662

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