I just started reading
Gravity and I'm hooked! I've been on a non-fiction kick for about a year now and decided that this would be a good reason to take a fun, page-turning break. My first Gerritsen was
Vanish and it wasn't a great read for me. I don't think it had enough "science" in it for me. I am enjoying
Gravity and it reminds me of one of my other favorite authors, Dan Brown. I really enjoyed
Deception Point along with his other more popular titles.
I'm at the point in
Gravity where the mouse is about to lick the floating mass of Archaeon in the ISS lab. Is there anyone else out there just starting the book? I'm sure that Tess is going to tell me all about Archaeon but I am a bit OCD with research and do decided to get a head start by Googling Archeon. I am particularly interested in the biotech/biomed applications of Archaea. I was surprised that I didn't find too much in the way of current (07-09) research (at least not in a cursory search) but I did find a 2002 paper from the journal
Archaea on the perspectives of biotech apps of archaea. If I were using this book with students (in particular college bound science interest students) I would want to make connections with the fiction and some practical skill applications (aka science literacy). I would use this journal paper as a way to supplement the info on archaea but also teach some technical reading skills, something I didn't truly learn until graduate school. Journal papers are not easy reads and to expose our students early on to this type of reading and writing format can only help them succeed. Combining
Gravity with an activity like this doesn't make the technical reading seem so daunting. I've attached a PDF of this paper for anyone interested.
I'd like to ask Tess how she dealt with all the technical reading she must have done in the research for this book? Does she have any tips or tricks that she used when reading dry, data-oozing journal papers? I'll have to check to see if there's a forum for questions to ask Tess.