Photo de l'auteur
27+ oeuvres 283 utilisateurs 5 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Leslie Alan Horvitz is the author, coauthor, or editor of numerous books on science and the history of science
Crédit image: Lelsie Horvitz/Leslie Horvitz

Œuvres de Leslie Alan Horvitz

Causes Unknown (1989) 27 exemplaires
The Dying (1987) 27 exemplaires
The Donors (1982) 24 exemplaires
Blood Moon (1978) 15 exemplaires
The Essential Book of Weather Lore (2007) 15 exemplaires
SynBio (2013) 11 exemplaires
Die Organspender (1989) 1 exemplaire

Oeuvres associées

Fears (1983) — Contributeur — 57 exemplaires
Shadows 6 (1983) — Contributeur — 54 exemplaires
Midnight (1985) — Contributeur — 46 exemplaires
Shadows 9 (1986) — Contributeur — 37 exemplaires
The Seaharp Hotel (1990) — Contributeur — 36 exemplaires
After Midnight (1986) — Contributeur — 29 exemplaires

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Nom légal
Horvitz, Leslie Alan
Autres noms
Hartman, Dane (pseudonym)
Date de naissance
1948-03-03
Sexe
male
Nationalité
USA
Professions
writer
editor
speaker
Agent
Kathy Horn (Roadrunner Talent and Media)
Courte biographie
Les Horvitz began writing before he turned 12, cranking out unpublishable novels on his mother’s manual Royal typewriter in the basement. Father a doctor (only job ever obtained through nepotism working in an ER for a summer, didn’t lead to become a doctor, deflating parental hopes, but got to cut out an appendix (cut on the dotted line). Went on writing unpublishable novels for years. Didn’t stop. Couldn’t stop. Wrote anything they paid him for and many things they didn’t. A novel is published – under a pseudonym. Terrible cover. Hold the champagne. More promising publishing deals. A novel sells in the hundreds of thousands, garners foreign rights. Pop the cork. A publisher goes out of business. Checks stop coming but he keeps going.

Celebratory bottles of Champagne a distant memory. Acquires an Otrona, heavy mother with a tiny green screen, 64 K capacity. One night meets an editor of a newsweekly at a bar– he’s looking for writers. Gets a better computer – more memory. A few years later receives a phone call out of the blue – a book editor is looking for a writer to collaborate with epidemiologists (the folks who try to locate the source of an outbreak of disease and put a stop to it.) A big break – what E.B. White said about New York – that you have to be willing to be lucky – is true.

Travels to Karachi, Vail, Colorado and Atlanta to work on the book – his first nonfiction in hardcover. Karachi not recommended for tourism. Becomes known for writing books about medicine and science – ironically because he never took a single science course in college, karmic revenge maybe. . More collaborations follow. Works on a project with a detective specializing in art forgery, art fraud and theft – never comes to fruition but educational. (Best way to rob a safe: drill into it from the floor below.) Worked on another project with New York State’s most notorious prisoner who gets killed in prison yard fight – end of collaboration.

Les Horvitz is the author of over thirty novels including Synbio, The Donors, Double Blinded, The Dying and Causes Unknown. Editions of his books have been published in Germany, Poland, Hungary, Norway, Japan, Russia, South Korea, Brazil and the UK. He is also the author of several works of nonfiction, most recently The Essential Book of Weather Folklore, The Encyclopedia of War Crimes and Genocide, The Weather Tracker, Night Sky Tracker Eureka: Scientific Breakthroughs That Changed the World, and Understanding Depression with Dr. Raymond DePaulo of Johns Hopkins University. In 1996 Horvitz collaborated with Dr. Joseph McCormick and his wife, Dr. Susan Fisher-Hoch, both noted epidemiologists, on Level 4: Virus Hunters of the CDC. (Separately and together, the two investigated countless epidemics ranging from Ebola and HIV in Zaire to Lassa Fever in Sierra Leone and Hantan Fever in China. Level 4 refers to a biohazard unit in the Centers for Disease Control where scientists examine some of the most lethal pathogens known to man.)

Les has covered a variety of business, political and social topics for general interest magazines including articles on money laundering, international organized crime, financial mergers, global trade, and fraud in biomedical research.

http://lesliehorvitz.com/about/

Membres

Critiques

While SynBio by Leslie Horvitz had a great premise, the hacking of DNA, the plot deteriorated into something other than a science fiction thriller. While the suspense was still there, it became a novel about a series of hook-ups to gather DNA from various men and lost much of the initial excitement. In the end it was so-so and a forgettable book for me.


Disclosure: My Kindle edition was courtesy of the author for review purposes.
 
Signalé
SheTreadsSoftly | 2 autres critiques | Mar 21, 2016 |
The new book in this batch, published last month, is SynBio by Leslie Alan Horvitz. This book will make geneticists crazy, because it’s got just enough information about what we currently know about DNA mixed with just enough speculation to make a very frightening book—but one that bears little resemblance to reality.

Seth Stringer works for Chimera Biogenetics, a company that does cutting edge research on using genes to cure disease. But, hey, guess what? If you can cure disease genetically, you can also cause it, and that makes their work a possible weapon. Eugenie Tattersall is the Biogenetics employee who’s busy doing whatever it takes to get the genetic material necessary for assassinations and murders. Then, it turns out that job changing isn’t an option; you don’t retire at Biogenetics. You die.

Ultimately, SynBio is a thriller with some s/f elements. It also heads into predictable territory fairly quickly, which makes it less interesting as we drag through the (seemingly) endless series of hookups necessary to get DNA samples.

Reviewed on Lit/Rant: www.litrant.tumblr.com
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
KelMunger | 2 autres critiques | Aug 11, 2014 |
3.25 Stars
A medical espionage thriller with a good plot and plenty of potential; but the MCs need more depth and the writing needs just a bit of polish. It's gritty and fast-paced and the ending left the storyline open for a sequel.
I loved the DJ's playlist at the club.

Net Galley Feedback
½
 
Signalé
LibStaff2 | 2 autres critiques | Jul 14, 2014 |
A man who has drifted through life becomes a dogged amateur sleuth when his estranged brother is shot dead and it's ruled a suicide. A young doctor who's called in to assist the ME finds out her suspicions are ignored by the police and her illustrious boss. Mix a conspiracy theory with a serial killer and this is what you get. I finished it but the plot was fairly absurd and I never really could figure out why the protagonist was so determined when he didn't seem to have any connection to his dead brother.… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
bfister | Aug 23, 2007 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
27
Aussi par
6
Membres
283
Popularité
#82,295
Évaluation
½ 3.5
Critiques
5
ISBN
51
Langues
6

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