|
Alumna Science Writer Reviewed in Prestigious Medical Journal |
| April 2007 |
Science
journalist and Milton graduate, Cynthia Fox ’79, recently
visited campus to talk with biology students about her newly published
book Cell of Cells: The Global Race to Capture and Control the
Stem Cell. Anne Harding of The Lancet, one of the
world’s oldest peer-reviewed medical journals, reviewed Cynthia’s
book less than two weeks later. Ms. Harding’s review points
not only to Cynthia’s sound scientific research, but also
to her ability as a writer to engage the reader with lively and
compelling detail.
During her recent classroom visit, Cynthia attributed her interest
in writing and science to her teachers at Milton: “At Milton
I became interested in writing thanks to classes like those of John
Charles Smith (English department), who has a gift for making students
aware of beauty in the way that writing has let us see, hear, touch,
understand and celebrate the world through the ages. Because of
JC and other unusual Milton English and history faculty, I knew
I wanted to be a writer as I neared graduation. But I knew I had
to write about something, and Milton’s biology classes—which
outranked many college biology classes—were compelling as
well. They were so compelling that I, at one point, took the two-hour
"cross country jogging" class because it let me jog off
into the hills, then sit down to read the biology book for Anthony
Domizio’s class that I had earlier planted there. This is
admittedly evidence of the kind of spectacular athlete I was not,
but it is also evidence of the kind of spectacular teacher Mr. Domizio
was.”
From The Lancet; April 21, 2007
Peopled with quirky characters and crowded with strange and beautiful
places, Cell of Cells reads like the best travel writing,
but the author doesn't stint on the science, or the politics, of
her subject. Cynthia Fox spent years touring the world's stem cell
hotspots, staking out labs from Egypt to Israel to Singapore, and
peering over the shoulders of scientists and surgeons. Her exhaustive
legwork has produced a highly entertaining book.
Dozens of key stem cell scientists get personality profiles, as
well as a thorough accounting of their work and thought, including
Israel's Shimon Slavin, the bone marrow transplantation pioneer
who is now using stem cells to create dual immune systems; Jerry
Yang of the University of Connecticut's Center for Regenerative
Biology, the first scientist to clone an adult farm animal; and
Harvard's Jonathan Tilly, who overturned decades of medical dogma
by demonstrating the existence of mammalian oocyte stem cells. We
get to know patients treated with stem cells, and are offered a
surgeon's-eye view of their operations.
Fox's often wry tone is ideal for capturing the excitement, and
the hype, that accompany any promising medical advance. Fascinatingly,
she was researching the book during the spectacular fall of Seoul
National University researcher Hwang Woo Suk, whose reports of making
the world's first human cloned stem cells were eventually exposed
as fraud. We follow Hwang on his way up, basking in the attention
of admirers at international meetings and whisking Fox through his
state-of-the art lab. And when the time comes to tell of Hwang's
disgrace, Fox does an excellent job of helping the reader keep the
characters involved, and their misdeeds, straight.
Cell of Cells opens with the words of researcher Susan
Fisher: “Science is like a stream of water. It finds a way.”
And Fox provides us with a compelling account of just what this
means in today's world of “presidential lines,” Singaporean
billions, and scientists as rock stars. Let's hope she brings us
along on her next voyage.
Founded in 1823 by Thomas Wakely, The Lancet is well-known
for taking strong, and sometimes controversial, stands on timely
and important medical issues.

|