Nano
Written by Robin Cook
Narrated by George Guidall
3/5
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Currently unavailable
Currently unavailable
About this audiobook
But the corporate campus is a place of secrets. She's warned by her boss not to investigate the other work being done at the gigantic facility, nor to ask questions about the source of the seemingly endless capital that funds the institute's research. And when Pia encounters a fellow employee on a corporate jogging path, suffering the effects of a seizure, she soon realizes she may have literally stumbled upon Nano LLC's human guinea pigs. Is the tech giant on the cusp of one of the biggest medical discoveries of the twenty-first century-a treatment option for millions-or have they already sold out to the highest bidder?
Robin Cook
Doctor and author Robin Cook is widely credited with introducing the word ‘medical’ to the thriller genre, and decades after the publication of his 1977 breakthrough novel, Coma, he continues to dominate the category he created. Cook has successfully combined medical fact with fiction to produce over thirty international bestsellers, including Outbreak, Terminal, Contagion, Chromosome 6, Foreign Body, Intervention and Cure.
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Reviews for Nano
71 ratings11 reviews
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I previously read the earlier Pia Grazdani novel, Death Benefit, 7 years ago and can't remember much about it other than the character wasn't particularly enamoring and that it was one of the worst Robin Cook books I had read. When I saw this I thought I'd give the character another shot as the scenario sounded interesting having enjoyed Crichton's Micro. Nano, sadly, continues the trend laid down by Death Benefit. It's not particularly exciting, the Pia character seems unrealistically magnetic to trouble, and even though she is the heroine of the book somehow in wrapping up the story we do not find out what has happened to her. It's almost as if the author just said that's enough pages for the book contract and wrapped it up in as few pages as possible. I'm a huge fan of Robin Cook's Jack Stapleton and Laurie Montgomery series, it's genuinely interesting and the characters are likable and relatable, this book however seems like it wasn't even written by the same person who wrote the former. If you are interested in a good medical thriller, check those out and pass on Nano, if you're interested in a good thriller about nanotechnology check out Critchton & Preston's Micro.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5This is probably Robin Cooks worst book ever.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Disappointed. Suffered through to the end, only to have my hopes for a conclusion dashed upon the rocks of obscurity.
I am loathe to give book a two-star rating, but I am unashamed to proclaim this as a meager one-star.
This book would never have been published if it had not been penned by a best-selling author. It is an incomplete first draft, rushed to market, which has the potential of a good story and glimmers of good writing sprinkled throughout, but the potential and glimmers are lost in the mire of:
1. A protagonist with no empathetic value,
2. A protagonist with no true motivation and so she becomes a plot device,
3. An antagonist who is flatter than 3-day-old road kill,
4. Persistent "head-hopping" (point-of-view shifts) that most readers don't mind, but drives me as an author crazy, since I've been required to weed them out of my own narrative, and
5. A contrived plot that ends in a fog.
To all authors and publishers: Don't be a slave to the deadline. If the story doesn't work or is underCOOKed, don't print it. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I have read some of Cook's books before - but not in a long time. Now I am reminded why ! This is a very shallow book - long on scientific background but short on character development as well as intrigue. I doubt if I will bother with any of Cook's work in the future.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I hadn't read any of Cook's novels in a while so I thought I'd give Nano a chance. Premise was rather interesting .. but execution a bit over the top for my tastes. An odd ending, as well. The main character, Pia, was a grand pain in the ass, however, so I really wasn't that disappointed.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I've really enjoyed some Robin Cook novels, but others just didn't resonate with me. This was one of the latter. Set in a high-tech industrial research & development environment, he lays out an intriguing situation and interesting characters and offers some useful information about the nature and promise of nanotechnology. But then he loses control of the book. The protagonist proceeds from one perilous situation to another, while the inscrutable Chinese who are bankrolling the illegal and unethical human experiments are also scheming to steal the company from the protagonist's boss . . . and the boss has the hots for the protagonist.I did finish the book, but the last hour or so of reading it could have been better spent ironing my gym socks.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5An average book..heroine victorious over villains...her employer.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I read this last year but forgot to list it so I'm just putting it in now for my own benefit to keep track of what I have already read/listened to by Robin Cook.....
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A techno-medical-corporate drama incorporating the usual unsuspecting doctor. In this case, it is Pia, from his last book, who is taking time off doing working at a research lab in Colorado. She comes across a runner who had a cardiac arrest while out jogging. From that the suspense and intrigue emerges. The book is suspenseful, but tends to drag in the last third. The last ten pages has a surprise ending. It does lend itself to a followup. Any Robin Cook fan, for better or for worse, would enjoy this.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5I have read all of Robin Cook's books and have generally liked them but, this book was the exception. I thought the author took too long to develop the storyline and it really didn't get exciting until the last 1/3 of the book. Plus *SPOILER ALERT* Pia didn't get saved at the end so, this allows Cook to write another book in this series as this was a sequel to Death Benefit, his last book. I wouldn't recommend this book or the one before this one, although, I thought Death Benefit was the better book.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Never met a nanotech thriller I didn’t like—until nowMichael Crichton’s novel Prey opened the possibilities of nanotechnology to me. Sure the plot was preposterous, but I devoured both the fiction and the fact, and I couldn’t stop turning the pages! Subsequently, I’ve taken great pleasure in other nano-thrillers such as Nano by John Robert Marlow, Plague Year (and its sequels) by Jeff Carlson, and most recently, Spiral by Paul McEuen. I enjoyed each of these novels immensely, and so was looking forward to Dr. Cook’s take on the subject.It is unsurprising that his interest in the science of nanotechnology is from a medical perspective. The protagonist of Nano is Pia Grazdani, who some readers met in Cook’s prior novel Death Benefits. I am not among those readers, but I don’t believe that additional familiarity with the lady would have helped Cook’s cause. I found her a truly unlikable protagonist to build a novel (or series?) around. Diagnosed with attachment disorder due to her traumatic upbringing, she’s a cold fish indeed. Consequently, no matter how intelligent and beautiful she was, I found it truly difficult that she was so sought after for friendship and romance. I did not enjoy my time in her company at all.And perhaps I could have overlooked that—after all, Mr. Crichton’s novels were not known for their cozy characters—if the plot or the science had carried me away. I’m sad to say that this was a three strikes situation. Pia has graduated from med school, but rather than enter residence and get her license to practice, she has (wisely) turned towards the research side of the field. She’s doing very well at Nano, LLC, working on original research into microbivores, microscopic bots that can function almost as an auxiliary immune system. Now, you know how readers are always kvetching about too much science in these books? I’m the reader that says, “Give me more! And a bibliography at the back!” Therefore, it is saying something when I tell you that in Dr. Cook’s hands this fascinating science is a snooze. Seriously, I don’t know how he did it.Things briefly perk up when Pia stumbles across an apparently lifeless body on the company grounds—and then manages to revive him. After which the corporation all but kidnaps the man in order to keep hospital doctors from running further tests on him. But truthfully, none of it was very interesting, very believable, or very well plotted. The final insult is the novel’s utter lack of resolution. Oh, Dr. Cook, I grew up reading you. I have such fond memories! Is it you that’s changed, or is it me? Whoever it is, we’ve grown apart. And you, my friend, have jumped the shark.