Status Updates From The Carriers: What the Frag...
The Carriers: What the Fragile X Gene Reveals About Family, Heredity, and Scientific Discovery by
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Mustafa Abbass
is 65% done
It is rare to find a science book explaining a complex biological problem—an "orphan" disease, as the author called it—that keeps you hooked on every page turn...
To Anne Skomorowsky, it is simple, just bombard the readers with a story after another about the people, their children, their parents, and even their grandparents.
You start to know these people, their stories, and can't but feel empathetic towards them.
— Jun 01, 2022 10:38AM
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To Anne Skomorowsky, it is simple, just bombard the readers with a story after another about the people, their children, their parents, and even their grandparents.
You start to know these people, their stories, and can't but feel empathetic towards them.
Mustafa Abbass
is 37% done
Still going strong...
"This book is called "The Carriers", and its focus is not on people with fragile X syndrome but on their mothers and fathers and other people who were once considered unaffected by fragile X mutations."
"Before a problem can be understood, someones has to notice it, there has to be a language to describe it, and the right people to investigate it."
— May 24, 2022 12:56PM
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"This book is called "The Carriers", and its focus is not on people with fragile X syndrome but on their mothers and fathers and other people who were once considered unaffected by fragile X mutations."
"Before a problem can be understood, someones has to notice it, there has to be a language to describe it, and the right people to investigate it."
Mustafa Abbass
is 13% done
“The Carriers asks how a tiny mutation on the X chromosome could affect character and fate but still remain invisible—until now. The mutation has shaped unsuspecting families for generations. It just needed time to make itself known.”
I'm enjoying the storytelling so far. It makes a "niche" biomedical subject matter much more approachable by a wider spectrum of readers.
— Apr 26, 2022 03:13PM
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I'm enjoying the storytelling so far. It makes a "niche" biomedical subject matter much more approachable by a wider spectrum of readers.









