oneofakind_misokim

Miso Kim Kim itibaren Shaftesbury, Shaftesbury, Dorset SP7 8QZ, İngiltere itibaren Shaftesbury, Shaftesbury, Dorset SP7 8QZ, İngiltere

Okuyucu Miso Kim Kim itibaren Shaftesbury, Shaftesbury, Dorset SP7 8QZ, İngiltere

Miso Kim Kim itibaren Shaftesbury, Shaftesbury, Dorset SP7 8QZ, İngiltere

oneofakind_misokim

3.5 stars. A good book about the famous HeLa cell line that has contributed so much to science, interlaced with the story of the original donor, Henrietta Lacks, and her family. Skloot objectively discusses the legal and ethical issues involved when research is carried out on tissue samples taken from human subjects. Do you own every piece of your body? Should you be informed whenever a bit of it, however small, is taken away and experimented upon? Are you entitled to compensation if a corporation profits from research done on your genetic material? You might not be surprised at the answers to these questions for a poor, uneducated black patient in 1951 - Henrietta was not asked, was not informed, was not compensated. It's interesting to consider that the answers are still uncertain for a modern patient. The science in the book is lightweight. I wish the author had written more about HeLa and a little less about her personal relationship with Henrietta's daughter.

oneofakind_misokim

Okay, if you sometimes binge on historical romances, and then read all the ones your friend recommended and then try heading out on your own and suddenly realize, oh wait, the majority of the genre is awful, full of 'his forceful kisses stifled her protests!' type stuff where the protagonists are cardboard cut-outs distinguished only by how annoying they are... Here is an author to start your next binge with. I suspect the 'historical' part is not something you should lean on too hard, so if that's going to be a big deal for you, this may not be your book, but to be honest, I don't want too much historical realism in my romances; when you look at the degree of agency afforded to women and the lower classes throughout most of history, it's just damn depressing. On the other hand, I find stories where every girl is climbing down a drainpipe and dressing as a boy, or, alternately, where women are afforded all the respect and dignity men are almost as aggravating, because if that's the case, why does this society still appear to be run by men? So, clever women who see how their society constrains them and work to get around the barriers? I'm not going to be too critical. Bonus for total lack of 'overpowering your objections is sexy!' (Side-note: The female protagonist has the cutesy elocution Georgette Heyer uses to indicate someone is a native French speaker. Basically, she talks like Leonie from These Old Shades. This might annoy you? I didn't mind.)