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Rock Bottom Paul Bernstein Md
Rock Bottom
Paul Bernstein Md
Publisher Marketing: Six years into the worst drought in history, fresh oranges go for $10 each, and food is scarce. Just when Californians think things can't get worse, their last lifeline, the California Aqueduct, is held hostage, creating more havoc than a Richter 7. Scott Acosta, a plant biologist and the son of a Mexican farm worker, spends twenty hours a day in the most advanced greenhouse in America. Scott, who is deaf and hears with a cochlear implant, has bioengineered a miracle plant that can save California from starvation. He has reversed photosynthesis. That's right. His plants produce water. Brenton Ecco, Scott's former college roommate, is willing to do almost anything to stop Scott. Brenton, the son of the CEO of Ag-Gen, the nation's richest and most successful Agri-business, is the charismatic leader of the Friends of the Environment, an organization dead set against genetically modified Frankenfoods like Scott's miracle plant. When the head of the California Water Board dies mysteriously while golfing on the brown, the Health Department and California Highway Patrol investigate. Doctor Andie Andrews, the Public Health Director, is now back in Scott's life for the first time since his tragic accident. To avoid more deaths, the Aqueduct Directors in Sacramento are faced with a "China Syndrome" decision-allow the potentially deadly water to flow or shut off the entire water supply. Either way, Californians face catastrophe unless Scott and Andie can figure out what's really going on. From the drying marshes of the Sacramento Delta to the wind parched Tehachapi Mountains, California's survival is in the hands of a farm worker's deaf son, an overzealous environmentalist, a troubled highway patrolman, a gluttonous land speculator, and a single mom. Contributor Bio: Bernstein MD, Paul Although it is 10 p.m., and Paul Bernstein, M. D., has spent four hours in surgery at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in San Diego, his evening is not over. Bernstein will go home, sit down at his computer, and spend the next two hours working on his latest novel. This is just a glimpse of the energy and dedication this graduate of UCSD School of Medicine pours into his twin passions: providing the best possible care for his patients as Kaiser's San Diego Medical Director, and sharing great stories through his fiction. These passions came together last fall when Bernstein published Courage to Heal, a historical novel telling the true story of Dr. Sidney Garfield, who along with industrialist Henry Kaiser, who created the first health maintenance organization and forever changed American medicine. Bernstein's love of history-he's the founder of the Kaiser Permanente Historical Society-also fueled his desire to tell Garfield's story. In fact, Bernstein was actually a history major when he attended UCLA, but eventually chose a medical career after being accepted by UCSD. "I was in the medical school's second graduating class, and it was an exciting time to be at UCSD," Bernstein recalls. "They had just brought in all these world renowned scientific and medical experts to start the school and our class was so small, we got to interact with them on a one-on-one basis. Bernstein began writing fiction a decade ago. After years of taking classes, joining writers' groups and spending countless hours at his craft, Bernstein's "Courage to Heal" was published to strong reviews and several awards. His latest novel, Flashblind, has won awards in the New York, Southern California, and San Francisco book festivals. ForeWord Magazine reviewed it as "a first rate medical thriller that has it all: action, intrigue, suspense, and even a bit of romance. Solid characterization, believable dialogue, and a healthy dose of realism drive this medical drama."
| Mediji | Grāmatas Paperback Book (Grāmata ar mīksto vāku un līmēto muguru) |
| Izlaists | 2015. gada 20. septembris |
| ISBN13 | 9781517148737 |
| Izdevēji | Createspace |
| Lapas | 232 |
| Izmēri | 127 × 203 × 12 mm · 231 g |