Liked It“A science fiction book that lives up to it's name and the theme there is always a way to end things peacfully, The Genesis Machine starts with a young scientist by the name of Bradly Clifford who was drafted to contribute to defense priorities of a repressive America. When he starts getting sick...” see full review » see other reviews » |
“A science fiction book that lives up to it's name and the theme there is always a way to end things peacfully, The Genesis Machine starts with a young scientist by the name of Bradly Clifford who was drafted to contribute to defense priorities of a repressive America. When he starts getting sick of helping create weapons of war, he leaves to work independently with a group of gifted people to work on controlling and synthesising gravity. But these discoveries have enormous potential for defense and intellegince gathering, and the government becomes involved in Clifford's work once again. They charge him with creating an unstoppable super-weapon with the discoveries he has made to describe "As the zero flashed up, all five targets exploded together in a flash of red light from nowhere:at the same instant all traces of the attacking missle vanished.". Now he is torn between giving America the world dominating power of the super-weapon or not and be dubbed a traitor. I'd recommend this to anyone who likes sci-fi or a good (fake) political comflict.
”