I loved Pendulum of Justice. Now I’m reading W Donway’s “The Way the Wind Blew” so far so good. DKHalling did more than your average amount of research. There was nothing fuzzy about it, when an explanation was called for she did the heavy lifting and the picture was clear as an unmuddied lake. Besides making the technical aspects easy to understand the description of food was extra ordinarily memorable. Maybe an odd thing to say, but it’s true.
I am sure I told you about "O Human Child." that should be next on your list. Walter Donway is a beautiful writer. Looking at early american artists. lovely, lush, evocative, wild and trying to tame at the same time. brilliant
There are many authors here. After reading "Pendulum of Justice", I read "The Frankenstein Candidate" by user vinay, then "Shadows Live Under Seashells" by user AJAshinoff. I think user WDonway is next on my list.
No problem with the first half here either... or the names. My wife has done extensive heart research at Johns Hopkins and for various clients at a contract research facility. She noted a couple of minor technical issues, but also pointed out that they were irrelevant to the plot. Congratulations on more good reviews. I am certain they will continue to keep coming in.
issues with how we described something? The procedure itself is real. Awaiting funding for FDA. PM me when she's got time to let us know. We have just seen another Gulch review! Spinkane's review made me google! I did receive one horrible review. Luckily, they did not finish the book and post an Amazon review. You might be surprised to know they work for the federal govt.
Saying George Guidall would read your book is the highest compliment I could think of. If you have a month, listen to him read Don Quixote, he does all of Vince Flynn’s Novels (Mitch Rapp).
yes, I thank you. I had to read Don Quixote in spanish in HS. I'm sure I missed a bunch of good stuff there with Cervantes. I did not know who G. Guidall was. so far, it looks like my brother-in-law is going to do the audio version. lol
That’s cool. If you could get George Guidall to read your book; it’d be like hitting the lottery. http://georgeguidall.com/biography.html listen at 20 seconds.
It's a bit over my head. She said that for the most part, it sounded very accurate. Most of her research at Hopkins was in the electrophysiology of the heart (sodium and potassium channels and all that). More specifically, genetic therapy distribution methods. She partly (is that the right word) holds a patent on the use of a DuPont chemical that is liquid at room temperature and solid at body temperature to literally "paint" the heart to deliver genetic therapy. I don't recall whether the genetic therapy in question used genetically altered viruses or antiviruses, but I think the patent is just for the delivery method. More recently she's worked with a research team using a chemical that flushes away death hormone and other residuals from heart damage. Again, it's mostly beyond my ability to speak intelligibly about. I'll grill her for more details.
Hmm... Maybe she said death proteins... whatever it is that promotes apoptosis. My understanding is that normal apoptosis or programmed cell death (PCD) is natural and healthy. Cancer cells seem to resist PCD when they cease to function properly. It's all very fascinating to me, but like I said, I don't really know enough to speak intelligibly about it.
Maybe it's this P53 protein? "p53 has many mechanisms of anticancer function, and plays a role in apoptosis, genomic stability, and inhibition of angiogenesis." - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/P53
Wow. Very nice and I believe I'll be adding this one to my library...alongside my well-thumbed, highlighted & numerous bookmarked 35th Anniversary edition AS.
hey Maree! Nice to see you in here. Thank you. You can download the Kindle app to your computer for free. When you want an ebook it will deliver to your account and open up in the Kindle app.
DKHalling did more than your average amount of research. There was nothing fuzzy about it, when an explanation was called for she did the heavy lifting and the picture was clear as an unmuddied lake. Besides making the technical aspects easy to understand the description of food was extra ordinarily memorable. Maybe an odd thing to say, but it’s true.
We have just seen another Gulch review! Spinkane's review made me google!
I did receive one horrible review. Luckily, they did not finish the book and post an Amazon review. You might be surprised to know they work for the federal govt.
http://georgeguidall.com/biography.html listen at 20 seconds.
You can download the Kindle app to your computer for free. When you want an ebook it will deliver to your account and open up in the Kindle app.