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Audiobook (abridged)4 hours
The Genius Factory: The Curious History of the Nobel Prize Sperm Bank
Written by David Plotz
Narrated by Stefan Rudnicki
Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
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About this audiobook
It was the most radical human-breeding experiment in American history, and no one knew how it turned out. The Repository for Germinal Choice-nicknamed the Nobel Prize sperm bank-opened to notorious fanfare in 1980, and for two decades, women flocked to it from all over the country to choose a sperm donor from its roster of Nobel-laureate scientists, mathematical prodigies, successful businessmen, and star athletes. But the bank quietly closed its doors in 1999-its founder dead, its confidential records sealed, and the fate of its children and donors unknown. In early 2001, award-winning columnist David Plotz set out to solve the mystery of the Nobel Prize sperm bank.
Plotz wrote an article for Slate inviting readers to contact him-confidentially-if they knew anything about the bank. The next morning, he received an email response, then another, and another-each person desperate to talk about something they had kept hidden for years. Now, in The Genius Factory, Plotz unfolds the full and astonishing story of the Nobel Prize sperm bank and its founder's radical scheme to change our world.
Believing America was facing genetic catastrophe, Robert Graham, an eccentric millionaire, decided he could reverse the decline by artificially inseminating women with the sperm of geniuses. In February 1980, Graham opened the Repository for Germinal Choice and stocked it with the seed of gifted scientists, inventors, and thinkers. Over the next nineteen years, Graham's "genius factory" produced more than two hundred children.
What happened to them? Were they the brilliant offspring that Graham expected? Did any of the "superman" fathers care about the unknown sons and daughters who bore their genes? What were the mothers like?
Crisscrossing the country and logging countless hours online, Plotz succeeded in tracking down previously unknown family members-teenage half-brothers who ended up following vastly different paths, mothers who had wondered for years about the identities of the donors they had selected on the basis of code names and brief character profiles, fathers who were proud or ashamed or simply curious about the children who had been created from their sperm samples.
The children of the "genius factory" are messengers from the future-a future that is bearing down on us fast. What will families be like when parents routinely "shop" for their kids' genes? What will children be like when they're programmed for greatness? In this stunning, eye-opening book, one of our finest young journalists previews America's coming age of genetic expectations.
From the Hardcover edition.
Plotz wrote an article for Slate inviting readers to contact him-confidentially-if they knew anything about the bank. The next morning, he received an email response, then another, and another-each person desperate to talk about something they had kept hidden for years. Now, in The Genius Factory, Plotz unfolds the full and astonishing story of the Nobel Prize sperm bank and its founder's radical scheme to change our world.
Believing America was facing genetic catastrophe, Robert Graham, an eccentric millionaire, decided he could reverse the decline by artificially inseminating women with the sperm of geniuses. In February 1980, Graham opened the Repository for Germinal Choice and stocked it with the seed of gifted scientists, inventors, and thinkers. Over the next nineteen years, Graham's "genius factory" produced more than two hundred children.
What happened to them? Were they the brilliant offspring that Graham expected? Did any of the "superman" fathers care about the unknown sons and daughters who bore their genes? What were the mothers like?
Crisscrossing the country and logging countless hours online, Plotz succeeded in tracking down previously unknown family members-teenage half-brothers who ended up following vastly different paths, mothers who had wondered for years about the identities of the donors they had selected on the basis of code names and brief character profiles, fathers who were proud or ashamed or simply curious about the children who had been created from their sperm samples.
The children of the "genius factory" are messengers from the future-a future that is bearing down on us fast. What will families be like when parents routinely "shop" for their kids' genes? What will children be like when they're programmed for greatness? In this stunning, eye-opening book, one of our finest young journalists previews America's coming age of genetic expectations.
From the Hardcover edition.
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Reviews for The Genius Factory
Rating: 3.6402478048780487 out of 5 stars
3.5/5
82 ratings10 reviews
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The book is rather creepy getting both into the entire field of eugenics and one man's idea of a Nobel sperm bank (although most of the donors were not, the original idea was to just have the sperm of prize winners in the fields he thought were important - no literature or peace winners for this guy). As well it details the effects of this on the families involved. This included the stress of hiding the secret as well as the pressure put on some of the kids to be 'genius babies'. Interesting read with both broader historical context and first person narratives.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A fascinating story that proves that the truth is sometimes stranger than fiction.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This is a non-fiction account of one man's attempt to improve the world by starting a sperm bank whose donors were all Nobel prize winners. I love this kind of thing; it's like a real-life dystopian/utopian story. So, I really enjoyed the beginning of this book, where the author described the reasoning behind the sperm bank, the key figures, the history of eugenics, and so on. Unfortunately, though, the book as a whole didn't quite live up to its beginning. It turned out that the sperm bank founder abandoned the idea of Nobel prize winners pretty early on and sometimes ended up with just average guys, so tracking the children afterwards couldn't really lead to any interesting results. Then the story focused a lot on the stories of children and mothers trying to find and connect with the donors, which I did mostly enjoy (some much more than others), but which didn't have the same intellectual interest. Still, I think this was a worthwhile read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5It's not a politically correct thing and wouldn't happen openly today and even then it caused some consternation. But this was in 1980 and the guy has lots of money. That's how 'Nobel Prize sperm bank' was born. Robert Graham was an eccentric American millionaire who thought that humanity needed his help - he thought that modern social welfare programmes had caused people who wouldn't have survived ages ago (in his term: the "imbeciles and incompetents") to survive now. This cause the degradation of human quality. Hence his attempt to gather the sperms of brilliant men, gifted scientists and great thinkers in a sperm bank, which in his mind would help boost the number of genius in the society and hence better the quality of human. It created quite a stir, but then after producing more than 200 'genius babies' it disappeared quietly at the end of the 1990s.David Plotz was intrigued with what became of the Nobel Prize Sperm Bank kids and tried to find them. He wanted to know whether this could be one of those study to determine the winner in the battle between nurture and nature. The book not only show the touching human story of the confusions experienced by the sperm bank kids, but also reveals the workings of the sperm banking industry, then and now. Despite his controversial aspirations apparently Graham's genius sperm bank set about the basis for the modern sperm banking industry, where clients are given a lot of information, unlike in the old days.And what about the genius babies? Do they turn out to be geniuses like their fathers are supposed to be? Read the book, it's interesting.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Incredible! Could NOT put in down!!!Had never heard of this place.Brings up all sort of moral and ethical questions.Wonderful writer - look forward to more by him.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5If you don't want to read about icky, sticky, sperm banks, then you can read every other chapter about the offspring who were born as a result of this engaging social experiment.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Fun, quick read. If you read Plotz's Slate articles on the subject, you got most of the best writing in the book. But it was still very nice for the details to be filled in and to get a better sense of the history behind sperm banks.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book tells the very interesting true story of the Nobel Prize Sperm Bank. It's a mix of eugenics, investigation, and modern fertility. It's written in a very journalistic style, which was the only drawback for me. I would have enjoyed it a lot more if there was more spark and excitement in the narrative.
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5Continuing story of Ramses and the notorious battle of Kadesh. Apparently, in this story, Ramses really DID take down an entire army with his sword. (dumb)
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A sperm bank that was established for Nobel Prize winners– sounds like science fiction right? But it’s true.David Plotz writes about the Repository for Germinal Choice, a sperm bank envisioned by its founder Robert Graham to arrest the declining quality of people and instead populate the world with the right kind of people– smart, highly accomplished ones. Plotz sought to find out what happened to the more than 200 children born through the Repository.Graham, who became rich and famous for inventing plastic eyeglasses, was a firm believer in eugenics. That is, he believed that the world would be a better place if only the best kind of people would breed. He set up the Repository in 1980 and it lasted until 1999, two years after his death. It earned the nickname “Nobel Prize sperm bank” because its first donors had been Nobel Prize winners. However, no children were conceived from this batch and no other Nobelists donated after that. Because Nobelists are typically already in their 60’s or 70’s, it was highly unlikely that their sperm would result to successful conceptions. This and the difficulty in getting the Nobelists to donate in the first place drove the Repository to recruit younger men who were accomplished in their own right– businessmen, mathematicians, scientists. To Graham, intelligence meant analysis and logic and he didn’t give much credit to artistic or musical intelligence.So did the children turn out to be geniuses? Plotz was able to get in touch with a few of them and he narrates their journey as they and their mothers seek to find the truth about the donors. It turns out that the Repository did not have a strict standard for the donors and did not check the veracity of the donors’ intelligence claims. They did not have an organized filing system either, so matching children with their fathers proved more difficult. The initial discovery that they were possibly fathered by Nobelists (the exact identities are kept secret and the Repository never really claimed that all their donors were Nobelists) changes one teenager’s view of himself and his family. The stories of the fathers meeting their kids are bittersweet and tragic.The author tries to understand what made the men agree to donate their sperm to the Repository and how they handled the knowledge that they had fathered children. Some had an exaggerated sense of self-worth, some wanted to be involved in fatherhood while some couldn’t care less about their ‘kids.’ He also tries to figure out what made the women seek sperm banks and this one in particular. In the end, the question about the children’s brilliance is answered by nurture. That is, women who go to sperm banks are those who really want to become mothers, which means that they are highly involved parents who raise confident, intelligent kids. By going to the Repository, they don’t lose anything but instead gain a slight chance of having more intelligent children.Plotz writes in a very casual way. It felt like reading one long magazine feature instead of a full-length book. (This style he probably gets from writing for Wired magazine.) He keeps the stories interesting by weaving in facts and his personal journey with the mother and kids. Interesting, too, are the anecdotes shared about Robert Graham; somewhere in the book he makes a connection to Gordon Moore of Intel.The book got me thinking about what a family really is, what a father and fatherhood meant, and how society views reproduction. Plotz also raised the nature versus nurture debate and sides more with nurture but not entirely discounting nature’s contribution.Rating: 3 out of 5, ok! Recommended for the new things I learned (especially about eugenics and the reproduction business) and for the insights on family and realizing one’s identity.