"Enjoyed it immensely ... completely believable ... life turned upside down by the high and mighty ... brings home one important point: Those who work in such high-risk surroundings need to be closely watched. Good reading ... I couldn't put it down.
Marilyn Brooks, Medical Editor since 1983, Pittsburgh WTAE-TV Action News
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"Science fiction yields to real science ... a horrific impact. THE BLOOD NOTES OF PETER MALLOW pictures the seemingly dry realm of biological research as a fascinating metaphor for the vulnerable human condition ... gripping ..."
FORT WORTH BUSINESS PRESS
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"Scary, because it's told from the inside. A great concept, full of drama - - - and what an ending!"
Roger Corman, Filmmaker
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"Dr Boor knows of what he writes. That's what makes this book so gripping ... a thrilling, fast-paced tale with intriguing characters, it's a story that really could happen."
– Jordan Rich, WBZ News Radio 1030, Boston
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"...holds the attention of every reader with the fatalism of a terrible traffic accident unfolding in slow motion. A real pressure-cooker of a suspense novel with a realistic thesis that is, frighteningly, all too possible."
WRITERS NEWS WEEKLY
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“...skillfully transports the reader to the daily inner workings of the much-feared and mysterious subjects of viruses and bio-attacks.... an energetic novel for both medical and nonmedical world.”
THE GALVESTON DAILY NEWS
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"Started reading it on a flight to visit my daughter in D.C. and couldn’t wait to get back to it. Read it in 24 hours. Lots of stress. You can make a country song out of it - it's got everything. A great book.”
Tedd Dumas, "Open Line" talk show, KWLV 107.1 FM, East Texas and Louisiana
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"I was fascinated with the 'bio bug' part of the book, but absolutely loved the characters. Mallow pedaling his bike around Galveston (when he's had a few pints) has a very sexy kind of kinkiness to him. Brenda: real, warm, sensitive yet spunky."
Trish Stevens, ASCOT Media
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"Toward the end, I was wishing I could stretch the book out; I was so into the characters and the story. I didn't want it to end. I REALLY want there to be a sequel."
Lin Aquilar, publicist, Chicago
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