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Rating:  Summary: A political thriller in its own right Review: I loved this book on two levels: sheer entertainment, and political history. On the entertainment side, I somehow can't get enough of "abuse of power" stories and their wretched central characters. Crewdson is the first to unequivocally and clearly document the most egregrious example on record in our most hallowed halls, those of science. Watch (and wonder) as the supposedly magisterial and wise drop everything but the thinnest pretense of honorable, rational behavior in a lust for fame, status, and patent annuities. It is a great white collar crime story, aided and abetted by many of Gallo's government loyalists, all of whom share the blame. On the political history side, Crewdson has exposed the modern myth of the infallible scientist, a kind of Macbeth of microbiology whose need for power threw his community into disarray. Although Crewdson doesn't say so, an interesting result may have been this: twenty years ago scientists were reported as baffled by AIDS, and today they are reported as still baffled (just scan over the "AIDS at 20" area of The New York Times Web site). Now take Crewdson's ghastly tale - never before fully told - and sandwich it in. You finish wondering if the entire course of AIDS research wasn't derailed from the beginning by Gallo's behavior and "gold rush" mentality. The bonus for the reader is that buying this book is like voting for a free press. Crewdson is the rare journalist whose own sweat and sacrifice is evident on every page, and without whose kind we could hope for little truth where it matters most.
Rating:  Summary: Character Assassination Redux Review: I loved this book on two levels: sheer entertainment, and political history. On the entertainment side, I somehow can't get enough of "abuse of power" stories and their wretched central characters. Crewdson is the first to unequivocally and clearly document the most egregrious example on record in our most hallowed halls, those of science. Watch (and wonder) as the supposedly magisterial and wise drop everything but the thinnest pretense of honorable, rational behavior in a lust for fame, status, and patent annuities. It is a great white collar crime story, aided and abetted by many of Gallo's government loyalists, all of whom share the blame. On the political history side, Crewdson has exposed the modern myth of the infallible scientist, a kind of Macbeth of microbiology whose need for power threw his community into disarray. Although Crewdson doesn't say so, an interesting result may have been this: twenty years ago scientists were reported as baffled by AIDS, and today they are reported as still baffled (just scan over the "AIDS at 20" area of The New York Times Web site). Now take Crewdson's ghastly tale - never before fully told - and sandwich it in. You finish wondering if the entire course of AIDS research wasn't derailed from the beginning by Gallo's behavior and "gold rush" mentality. The bonus for the reader is that buying this book is like voting for a free press. Crewdson is the rare journalist whose own sweat and sacrifice is evident on every page, and without whose kind we could hope for little truth where it matters most.
Rating:  Summary: Outstanding Review: Finally a book that puts all the pieces together. Having performed the initial flawed AIDS tests, I have always wondered at the political ramifications. And having worked as a Blood Banker for many years, I can only feel sadness knowing how the nation's blood supply was affected by the greed of one man. This book really needs to be made into a movie so that the public and politicians alike can understand how egos and politics can cause so much damage. I particularly like how the author intersperses true incidents where innocent victims contracted HIV because of the flawed Gallo AIDS test we were forced to use. This really drives Crewdson's point home. A job well done.
Rating:  Summary: Robert Gallo and the U.S. government as tragic heroes Review: Pay no attention to the man behind the curtain known as "A reader from Baltimore, MD." It's clearly Dr. Gallo himself. After reading more than six hundred pages of Gallo rants, you get to recognize the style pretty easily. So, the question is, is Dr. Gallo a tragic hero or just a bullying fraud? In his "Poetics," Aristotle defines a tragic hero as someone as good or better than we, brought low by his own tragic flaw. Certainly Dr. Gallo has plenty of tragic flaws, of which hubris or "overweening pride" must be uppermost. Other flaws include greed, vaingloriousness, bullying, a nearly complete inability to admit being wrong, a callous disregard for the injury he does others, and, most certainly, vanity. But is he any worse than the rest of us, which would make him, in Aristotle's definition, a comic hero? Probably not by much. He appears to be a weak man thrust into a situation that brought out the worst in him: big science. There's big money in big science -- big money, big egos, and big living. And, most of all, there's the Nobel Prize, which Gallo clearly covets desperately. And there's la vida, the lavish lifestyle of first-class tickets, fine hotels, jetsetting around the world, international prizes, a far cry from the everyday drudgery of the lab. So did Dr. Gallo give in to his lust for la vida and the Nobel Prize and commit scientific fraud? Almost certainly. But the more troubling aspect of Mr. Crewdson's book is the willing, nearly gleeful, complicity of the U. S. Government in perpetuating the fraud and intimidating any who would expose it. That the government put people's lives at risk by insisting on using the Gallo-sponsored AIDS test with its alarmingly high rate of false positives and even more troubling rate of false negatives is bad enough. Were patients infected with AIDS as a result? Absolutely. Like Dr. Gallo, the government too was thrust into a situation guaranteed to exploit its greatest weaknesses. And in the Reagan administration Dr. Gallo found his perfect match: people who were equally prideful, vainglorious, and bullying. In "Science Fictions," Mr. Crewdson protrays a government that has sold itself to the big American pharmaceutical companies. And for this portrayal alone the book is well worth its price. But what is even more fascinating is the sheer breadth of the research involved. Mr. Crewdson covers in depth not only the science but also the politics and legal wrangling involved in the US-French dispute of the discovery of the AIDS virus. One ironic note: Nicholas Wade, one of the science reporters who had hailed Dr. Gallo as a true hero, was at the same time writing his own history of scientific fraud, "Betrayers of the Truth" (now lamentably out of print) which is a fitting companion to "Science Fictions." It's too bad there aren't more stars. "Science Fictions" is an extraordinary work.
Rating:  Summary: Explosive expert expose of HIV research Review: Science Fictions is an important investigative work by a Pulitzer Prize author that should be on every congressman's reading list. John Crewdson writes with the pace of a Grisham or a Clancy and the precision of a safecracker. The book unlocks the doors of NIH and uncovers a rogue's gallery of confidence men with microscopes and burglar's wearing lab coats. Rather than Robert Gallo facing jail for his foul play, falsifications,and misrepresentations, Crewdson reminds the reader through his detailed reconstruction of events that Gallo has to endure a scientist's most painful sentence, a loss of credibility.
Rating:  Summary: The Candid Camera Review: The trouble with histories of science is that they are almost never contemporary and that historians of science know little of either. This is an enduring history of scientific events, a detailed tragedy of behavior, and a chronicle of John Crewdson's tenacity in learning the subtlities of molecular virology, the NIH bureaucracy, and the complexities of a person he had barely talked to. To those of us who were there as the events played out there are lessons about science, why we do it, and what it's really worth. But understand, I like and admire Bob Gallo. Now I feel I know him better.
Rating:  Summary: A riveting non-fiction thriller Review: This account of the discovery of the AIDS virus and the machinations and lies and trials and tribulations that followed was riveting. This book had me glued to my seat. Highly recommended.
Rating:  Summary: A riveting non-fiction thriller Review: This account of the discovery of the AIDS virus and the machinations and lies and trials and tribulations that followed was riveting. This book had me glued to my seat. Highly recommended.
Rating:  Summary: A masterpiece Review: This book is a stunning achievement that should win many awards. It brilliantly captures the shocking dishonesty of our top AIDS researchers and government officials. It should make most readers question much of what we have been told by the AIDS establishment about AIDS and HIV. Crewdson portrays Robert Gallo so deftly and dramatically (often with Gallo's own words) that it is hard to believe that Oliver Stone won't make this into a movie. Gallo comes off as the Nixon of AIDS. Crewdson is a very skilled researcher and writer who knows how to turn complex science into graceful, lucid prose. While this is a deadly serious book, I couldn't put it down and at times I found passages about Gallo and his AIDS cronies absolutely hilarious. But after one stops laughing comes the chilling thought that many of these dangerous clowns are still in control of AIDS research. Anyone who cares about the history of AIDS and the future of the epidemic must read this book. It is the most important contribution to our understanding of the real story of AIDS since Randy Shilts' "And the Band Played On." It certainly deserves the same amount of attention and success.
Rating:  Summary: watch your back Review: This is a MUST READ!!! Why isn't The Honorable Dr. Gallo suing Mr. Crewdson??? Where is he hiding? If what Mr. Crewdson has uncovered isn't true, why aren't we hearing or seeing Dr. Gallo's rebuttal? People want to KNOW THE TRUTH and I feel, as so many do, that he is right on target. Let's get to the bottom of this nightmare that has and is devastating so many innocent people and families. There is also another courageous person who is speaking out... Every person in the medical profession should definately read this informative book!!!
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