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An Intimate History

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The cover of “The Gene” - Open Library.

"The Gene" was published by Scribner in 2017 May - New York, USA, it has 592 pages and the language of the book is English.


“The Gene” Metadata:

  • Title: The Gene
  • Authors:
  • Language: English
  • Number of Pages: 592
  • Publisher: Scribner
  • Publish Date:
  • Publish Location: New York, USA

“The Gene” Subjects and Themes:

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  • Format: Ebook

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"The Gene" Table Of Contents:

  • 1- Prologue: Families
  • 2- The Missing Science of Heredity
  • 3- In the Sum of the Parts There Are Only the Parts
  • 4- The Dreams of Geneticists
  • 5- The Proper Study of Mankind Is Man
  • 6- Through the Looking Glass
  • 7- Post-Genome
  • 8- Epilogue: Bheda, Abheda
  • 9- Acknowledgments
  • 10- Notes
  • 11- Selected Bibliography
  • 12- Copyright

Snippets and Summary:

In the winter of 2012, I traveled from Delhi to Calcutta to visit my cousin Moni.

"The Gene" Description:

The Open Library:

From the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Emperor of All Maladies—a fascinating history of the gene and “a magisterial account of how human minds have laboriously, ingeniously picked apart what makes us tick” (Elle). “Dr. Siddhartha Mukherjee dazzled readers with his Pulitzer Prize-winning The Emperor of All Maladies in 2010. That achievement was evidently just a warm-up for his virtuoso performance in The Gene: An Intimate History, in which he braids science, history, and memoir into an epic with all the range and biblical thunder of Paradise Lost” (The New York Times). In this biography Mukherjee brings to life the quest to understand human heredity and its surprising influence on our lives, personalities, identities, fates, and choices. “Mukherjee expresses abstract intellectual ideas through emotional stories…[and] swaddles his medical rigor with rhapsodic tenderness, surprising vulnerability, and occasional flashes of pure poetry” (The Washington Post). Throughout, the story of Mukherjee’s own family—with its tragic and bewildering history of mental illness—reminds us of the questions that hang over our ability to translate the science of genetics from the laboratory to the real world. In riveting and dramatic prose, he describes the centuries of research and experimentation—from Aristotle and Pythagoras to Mendel and Darwin, from Boveri and Morgan to Crick, Watson and Franklin, all the way through the revolutionary twenty-first century innovators who mapped the human genome. Source: publisher's description

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