Monday, March 30, 2020

Chemistry Burden

Chemistry BurdenThe second book in the Belter series, Chemistry Burden is the third volume in the trilogy of science fiction novels written by William F. Burdge. Burdge has a very good grasp of science and its applications.It has been six years since he wrote the first book. When you look at the progress, he has kept with the times. The characters in the books are very real, and that makes them feel and react as if they were real people.I found myself glued to the text while reading Science on Trial: the Biochemistry of Drug Abuse. I was really amazed at how well he wrote the way he described the events and the way he went into the intricacies of drug abuse. It is also interesting to see how he tried to illustrate a chemical process.The first time I read the book, I was a little disappointed that there were only three possible endings to this book. It really made me think that the author is not too sure about what he wrote. After all, he has taken more than one decade to finish this project. In my opinion, I don't know if he thought the book would be successful if it was less complex and complicated.You will find the first part of the book - titled Is She Really Dead? - as a journey of the two main characters, called Terry and Kate.Science on Trial started out with an accident and death in a laboratory in the laboratory of William Burdge. A professor in another university noticed the incident, and that brought the attention of a con man. The con man, who called himself Professor Krickstein, was actually in the hospital trying to treat a serious illness of his friend, who was the victim in the case. He knew the story behind the death and wanted to use the story to extract some information from the victim's loved ones.Chemistry Burden: Part 2 began with a murder in a city called Sammie Diggins. When the body of an eminent scientist was found in the basement of the laboratory, the perpetrator went to the police and told them everything that he knows about the murd er. His account made it seem as if the scientist died from a condition called Phenylketonuria, which is a birth defect in humans that causes amino acids in the body to be converted into phenylalanine.The third part of the book is entitled Science on Trial: The Biochemistry of Drug Abuse. It is where the story comes full circle. It is also where our heroine, Kate Haight's character, has to come to terms with her daughter's death and the impact of the crime on her life.

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