Ratings73
Average rating3.9
Answered a promptFavorite horror books from the 80s and 90s?
So there's this guy Vergil. He's nerdy, overweight and unhealthy, and he hacked his university's data system to add in credentials he never earned so he could get a job in a bio lab doing research work. Do we like him? Probably not but Greg Bear writes him in such a way that we start out on his side.
The bio lab finds that he's been doing private stuff after hours. He's experimenting with encoding bio information and DNA onto microchips, wanting to create intelligent nanobots he can inject into people to cure diseases etc. It's not the normal approach to the mad scientist with dangerous intentions that we see, but Bear sneaks him in under our radar.
His boss decides he's got to go - today. But Vergil needs more time in the lab to complete his current experiments because he's getting somewhere. He needs to get his samples past the security guys and out of the lab. He decides to inject them into himself, then find another job in another lab where he can extract them and continue his work.
Does his plan work? Partly. The cells he's manufactured start multiplying in his bloodstream and they kick his system into a more healthy state. His physical condition improves. His eyesight improves. He becomes a fantastic lover. Everything is looking great for him. But he can't get another lab job and he can't control the increase of the 'wonder cells' in his body.
As the novel progresses the cells become a contagion and spread to other people. They cause changes that are far beyond what Vergil imagined. And like everything that a mad scientist in a SF book causes, things accelerate to the unbearable and point to the destruction of humankind.
So there's this guy Vergil. He's nerdy, overweight and unhealthy, and he hacked his university's data system to add in credentials he never earned so he could get a job in a bio lab doing research work. Do we like him? Probably not but Greg Bear writes him in such a way that we start out on his side.
The bio lab finds that he's been doing private stuff after hours. He's experimenting with encoding bio information and DNA onto microchips, wanting to create intelligent nanobots he can inject into people to cure diseases etc. It's not the normal approach to the mad scientist with dangerous intentions that we see, but Bear sneaks him in under our radar.
His boss decides he's got to go - today. But Vergil needs more time in the lab to complete his current experiments because he's getting somewhere. He needs to get his samples past the security guys and out of the lab. He decides to inject them into himself, then find another job in another lab where he can extract them and continue his work.
Does his plan work? Partly. The cells he's manufactured start multiplying in his bloodstream and they kick his system into a more healthy state. His physical condition improves. His eyesight improves. He becomes a fantastic lover. Everything is looking great for him. But he can't get another lab job and he can't control the increase of the 'wonder cells' in his body.
As the novel progresses the cells become a contagion and spread to other people. They cause changes that are far beyond what Vergil imagined. And like everything that a mad scientist in a SF book causes, things accelerate to the unbearable and point to the destruction of humankind.