The Gene is a sweeping, brilliantly written history of one of the most powerful and potentially dangerous ideas in all of science. Siddhartha Mukherjee, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Emperor of All Maladies, traces the concept of the gene from Gregor Mendel’s pea plant experiments in the 1860s through the discovery of DNA’s double helix structure by Watson and Crick to the CRISPR gene-editing revolution of today.
Mukherjee interweaves personal history throughout the book. His own family carries a legacy of schizophrenia and mental illness across generations, giving the story of genetics a deeply personal dimension that grounds the abstract science in human consequence. He explores how our growing ability to read, understand, and now edit the human genome raises profound questions about identity, normalcy, disease, and the meaning of being human.
The book covers the history of eugenics and the horrific abuses committed in the name of genetic science during the twentieth century, serving as a sobering reminder of the dangers of misapplied genetic knowledge. It also celebrates the genuine medical breakthroughs that genetic science has enabled, from understanding the molecular basis of inherited diseases to developing targeted cancer therapies.
The final sections of the book confront the CRISPR revolution directly, exploring what becomes possible when scientists can edit genes with surgical precision and asking who should make decisions about which traits are worth eliminating or enhancing in future generations.




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