1st Edition

Who Cloned My Cat? Fun Adventures in Biotechnology

By Renneberg Reinhard Copyright 2010
    178 Pages 93 B/W Illustrations
    by Jenny Stanford Publishing

    "Science is fun!" Is the motto of this fun-filled book by Prof Reinhard Renneberg. Cartoonists Manfred Bofinger (Germany) and Ming Fai Chow (Hong Kong) here together with Prof Renneberg, created a fireworks of stories with funny cartoons, which are easily digestable for the layman reader but at the same time will interest even the specialists. Through this collection of inspirational short stories, you will get a complete picture of the latest advances in modern biotechnology with no technical jargons, no equations and no animals harmed!

    Will Biotech Banish Wrinkles Forever?
    The Breast Milk of Civilization
    The Little Roaring Mouse
    Expensive and Often Useless
    Computers on the Compost Heap
    Hanging on to Hangovers
    How Fidel Saved US Biotech
    Killing Nemo
    007 and the Soup Stock
    Glow, Little Fish, Glow!
    Aspartame: Nothing but Sweetness
    "Irasshaimase, Baioteku"
    Vitamin C and the Fly
    Magic Bullets Against Cancer
    Helping Hands for Your Heart
    Nights on the Highway
    Doping? No, caterpillar fungus!
    Running Out of Phosphate
    Snowmax for the Alps?
    Praise for the Papaya
    Biochemical Bird Market
    One Pill for (Almost) Everything?
    Sterilized to Perfection
    A Tale About a Cold
    Biotech at the Barber’s?
    Just as Long as It Catches Mice!
    Even Bacteria Grow Old
    Give Us This Day Our Daily… Mushroom
    The Moldy Monopoly
    Finding the Fountain of Youth
    Hong Kong and the Bird Flu
    The Gene Off Switch
    Going to the Dogs?
    Flipper Gets Artificially Fertilized
    Heavily Toxic
    Smart Medicines
    Digital Intestinal Bacteria
    Tamiflu Fever in Hong Kong
    Save the Wild Birds!
    Depression from Antidepressants?
    Mussel Extract Takes On Vioxx®
    Clone Trees That Glow in the Dark
    A Brief History of Ecstasy
    Snuppy, Made in Korea
    Molecular Laundresses
    My Own Private Genome?
    Goethe and the Caffeine
    The Cats and the Bird Flu
    Malaria on the Ropes
    Blue Jeans Bacteria Blues
    Academic Dog-Catching
    Fighting Infection with Beer
    The Secret of the Sour Barrels
    The "Red" Crystallographer
    Pasteur, Evildoer
    The Oil Guzzlers Are Coming
    Antibiotic Stinky White Fungus
    Praising Ginger
    Litmus and Hemp
    Another Spoonful of Red Wine?
    DNA Caps
    Take the Old One
    Was Mozart’s Starling a Composer?
    Much Smoke About the Heart
    From Resignation to WHO
    "West Gelman" Eggs for Sale!
    DNA and My Ancestors
    The Chinese also Come from Africa
    Tanking Up with Corn
    Competition Is Good for Business
    Amino Acids, not Made in Japan!
    Busy Bees: It’s All in Their Genes!
    Leeuwenhoek’s Wee Beasties
    Genetic Engineering in Your Washer
    Yams and Cortisone
    Xylophagy in My Bookcase
    DNA Gunshots into the Sea
    Genetic Fingerprints
    Biofuel from Wood?
    Microbesoft?

    Biography

    Reinhard Renneberg has been professor of analytic biotechnology at the Hong Kong University of Science and Technology (www.ust.hk) since 1955. He is the author of the extremely successful and much-lauded volume "Biotechnology for Beginners", over 5,300 copies of which have been sold in 18 months. He has also written three other books on biotechnology, including the present volume. He is a co-author of the Roempp Biotechnology Dictionary, has written four monographs and 250 publications and holds 20 patents. In addition, he is involved in two biotechnology companies in Germany and China.

    "Renneberg's newest book, Who Cloned My Cat?, is a personal journey through the science and politics of biotechnology. Following in the tradition of Lewis Thomas and Stephen J. Gould, Renneberg has created a book perfectly suited for recreational reading, full of scientific wonder and social context."
    —Prof. David Goodsell, The Scripps Research Institute, USA

    "What a scientific book - interesting and informative! Using many funny illustrations and simple words, biotechnology is no longer a bugaboo for common people. This is the book that experts as well as beginners want to keep at their side."
    —Prof. Michihiko Kobayashi, University of Tsukuba, Japan