Synopses & Reviews
Nancy Kress, who made her reputation with award-winning SF praised for its engaging characters, gripping plots and technical sophistication, broke into the biomedical thriller field last year with Oaths and Miracles. In Stinger, Kress has once again put all of her finely-honed skills to work creating a hot new biomedical thriller.
FBI Agent Robert Cavanaugh has been transferred from the organized crime unit to the slow-paced field office for southern Maryland, where the biggest federal crime is the condition of the roads.
But things take an unpleasant turn when a nurse at a local hospital notices a sudden increase in the incidence of fatal strokes among otherwise healthy black adults. The trail leads to a new strain of malaria that causes rapid blood clotting in people with sickle-cell trait (which occurs more frequently in blacks and Indians), who begin to die.
It's an unlikely natural mutation, yet there's no hard evidence of human intervention. Did a fringe hate-group arrange for a bioengineered weapon to decimate the black population? As more people die, Cavanaugh must convince the FBI to look for the answers before it becomes an epidemic that threatens millions of lives ... or even race war.