It all started with Robin Cook and his novels:
Its heroine, Susan Wheeler, is one of those beautiful, brilliant medical students who’s constantly earning double takes from male colleagues or looking in the mirror and wondering if she’s a doctor or a woman—and why can’t she be both, dammit? On her first day as a trainee at Boston Memorial, she settles on “woman” and allows herself to flirt with an attractive patient on his way into a routine surgery. They make a date for coffee, but something goes wrong on the table and he goes into…a
Determined not to be stood up, Susan researches what happened to her date and discovers the hospital’s dirty secret: they’re selling internal organs to rich foreigners. There’s a chase, a narrow escape, a betrayal by a trusted authority figure, a conspiracy revealed, and a final scene featuring a striking image of comatose chumps dangling from wires. There are also a lot of lectures on medicine and ethics delivered with the plodding rhythms of a man unaccustomed to interruption, a failing Cook shares with Crichton, that other M.D.-turned-author.
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Indeed, science was no longer the domain of nerds wearing safety goggles; it was now the domain of action! Take, for example, the toxic effects of polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs): boring when you read about them in academic studies on drinking water, but exciting when they achieve sentience, dissolve the skin off a trucker, and make him smash his hurtling rig into a speeding train (
Similarly, there’s no time for dull academic debates about testing pharmaceuticals on animals when a lab monkey sheds its skin and becomes a tiny hell-skeleton wielding a hatchet and an erection, furiously trying to suck the blood from a housewife’s leg. When that happens you don’t need to consult a peer-reviewed journal—you just need to grab an electric knife and carve that sucker up. That’s from Daniel Gower’s
One wonders if even stringent testing protocols could have prevented the tragedy in
Pursuing a degree in forbidden and dangerous science? There are plenty of specialties to consider, including parapsychology (
Starry Starry Nightmare
Most of the science that appeared in these books was pseudoscience, to put it charitably. After all, the ’70s was the decade when finding a cure for cancer was abandoned in favor of finding the Loch Ness monster, searching for UFOs, researching ESP, and trying to establish a scientific basis for astrology. As we all know, the first three are valid areas of scientific inquiry; astrology is a bunch of bunk.