Ethan Evers, "The Eden Prescription: The war on cancer is not what you think…"
English | 2010 | ISBN: 1439276552 | PDF | pages: 383 | 1.7 mb
English | 2010 | ISBN: 1439276552 | PDF | pages: 383 | 1.7 mb
In this medical thriller, cutting edge researchers design an all-natural treatment for cancer that really works and are quickly targeted by powerful interests that will stop at nothing to defend their multi-billion-dollar drug industry.
AWARDED A KIRKUS STAR
Kirkus Review: “…an engrossing, well-paced thriller that will keep your heart rate up…”
AWARDED Five Stars (Out of Five) by ForeWord Clarion Review
“…keeps the reader turning the pages with impeccable dialogue, relentless action…up-to-date science… This is an exceptional piece of fiction.”
OTHER AWARDS
Bronze Medal - 2011 Living Now Book Awards (April 2011)
Finalist - 2011 National Indie Excellence Awards (May 2011)
Finalist - 2010 ForeWord Book of the Year Awards (June 2011)
Finalist - 2012 Indie Reader Discovery Awards
BACK COVER SUMMARY
What if the ultimate treatment for cancer was closer than most of us realize? A silent revolution has been unfolding recently in the science of natural medicine, bringing us so close to the answer—far too close, for some. Chromogen employee Annika Guthrie understands this more than most. She’s watched her terminally ill father add years to his life with natural supplements, and makes it her mission to turn this alternative medicine into what the medical community calls “real” science. It’s why she joins forces with the maverick but genius cancer researcher Dr. Elliott Lindell, even though he works with Mitogenica—Chromogen’s fiercest competitor. Together, they formulate a cocktail of natural supplements which Annika secretly gives to patients in Chromogen’s latest drug trial. The cocktail works so well, it threatens to undermine Chromogen’s next billion dollar chemo drug, and Annika’s world quickly falls apart. Her wards start curiously dying from everything but their cancer, and Dr. Lindell disappears on the eve of his most critical experiment. Annika soon finds she is the only one left who can recover what remains of Dr. Lindell’s work—and that she is racing against someone far larger and more deadly than her worst fears.