Inventing God
Hafiz is a twenty-five year old Muslim doing post-graduate work in genetics at the University of Beirut. He is one of a team working on the possibility of fashioning a biological weapon that would be effective against some ethnic groups and not others. This project seems to him impossible, but still highly dangerous. Lisa is a sixteen year old Israeli girl who feels threatened by the Jewish insistence on dwelling on memories of the Holocaust. She looks for a way out to a future. Maurice Rotblatt is a middle-aged ex-television-guru who comes to the Middle East and calls for a plague on all ethnic and religious belligerents. He then disappears. His friends in England wonder — is he a victim? A trickster? Or has he left hints about some hope for a future?-The story ends in September 2001. It is by the ability to look at the interweaving actions and aspirations of many different characters — in Lebanon, Israel, Turkey, England — that there might be a chance, it is suggested, for humans to be nudged out of their self-destructive genetic and environmental conditioning. Inventing God is a fascinating and highly topical new novel from a previous winner of the Whitbread Book of the Year award.
- Author
- Nicholas Mosley
- Format
- paperback
- Pages
- 304
- Publisher
- Vintage
- Language
- english
- ISBN
- 978-0-09-944503-6
- EAN
- 9780099445036
- Release date
- 2004
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