In this intriguing follow-up to Jellyfish Have Eyes, researcher Roger Resin unleashes his extraordinary hypothesis that abstract thoughts can be transmitted by infectious particles. Agree or disagree, his unlikely idea takes a surprising twist in favor of Roger’s destiny.
"An intriguing...ideas-driven tale of a haunted scientist."
Kirkus Reviews
"If you have wondered about the thoughts and goals of a research scientist, read this novel by the distinguished scientist/author, Joram Piatigorsky. Roger's journey through life of science will give you the insight you seek."
Robert Wurtz, NIH Scientist Emeritus, member National Academy of Sciences U.S.A.
"Roger's Thought-Particles enters no-man's land on the frontier between imagination and science. There's nobody better suited to probe this terrain than scientist Joram Piatigorsky."
Roger Herst, author of The Rabbi Gabrielle Series
"A thoughtful novel about the nature of thinking, Roger's ThoughtParticles is by turns philosophical, speculative, and even madcap. Most of all, it's a pleasure to read from start to finish."
Zach Powers, author of First Cosmic Velocity
"In the current era of contagions, pandemics, and the melding of science and suspicions, the living hallucinations and thought particles in this imaginative and colorful work will infect readers with possibility, optimism and creative alternatives to the concept of reality and inoculate against boredom!"
Ronda Beaman, author of My Feats in These Shoes
"Reading this novel is a fun, suspenseful adventure."
Douglas Alan Walrath, author of The Daredancers
"Joram Piatigorsky's novel, Roger's Thought Particles, melds storytelling and philosophy in a single work."
Lewis J. Beilman III, author of The Changing Tide
"Piatigorsky not only grasps the language of science, he presents a compelling look inside the mind..."
Tara Lynn Marta, author of Look Back to Yesterday and Dreaming Through the Eyes of God
"...we hold on to our hats as Dr. Roger Resin barges his way through the halls of the Vision Science Center on a quest to find a way to associate belief and optimism within the rigorous discipline of the scientific method."
James White, author of Borders in Paradise and Ransoms Are for Amateurs