И Бексински.
Боевые овощи там есть, но основные действующие лица когда-то были людьми. Или их зубами.
Human Race for Food
lift какого ШозЭанЙя
такие Злинные4-©[тонкиеÍují
Genocyber
Super-Conductive Brains: Parataxis
Левиафан, но если не пугает обилие фэнтези и отсылок к библии
Франкен Фран
1иэ

й
ПОЖАЛУйСТ А,
не думдйте, что вы
ОДНА ТАКАЯ.
>1
еероникд, ты зндешь, какая
КЛбТКА НиКОГАА
не умирдет сама по севе?
раз
теломерд
СЛОМАНА,
ддиссс-струк-
ТУРА РНК служит
ШАБЛОНОМ.
и
ттдеес-стук-ТУРА вОС-СТАНЛвЛивДеТСЯ КАК клеткд б целом.
Т6ЛОМ6РЫ ВЫРОЖДАЮТСЯ
и регенерируют 80
+ есть сплатбук GURPS biotech, где есть остальная часть списка
Human Cloning
Cherryh, C.J. Cyteen (Aspect, 1995). Set in the Union-
Alliance SF universe, the story focuses on a deliberate
attempt to recreate a murdered genius through a combination
of cloning and duplication of the original environment
and life experiences.
Cherryh, C.J. Serpent’s Reach (Mandarin, 1989). Longlived
aristocratic families breed cloned servants and trade
with insectoid aliens while feuding amongst one another.
Levin, Ira. The Boys from Brazil (Bloomsbury, 1998). An
attempt to clone Hitler and duplicate his upbringing;
makes the nature-versus-nurture point.
Weaver, Michael D. Mercedes Nights. (St. Martins, 1987).
A celebrity is cloned multiple times for sale as a sex toy.
Wolfe, Gene. The Fifth Head of Cerberus (Orb, 1994). A
clone family struggles with itself and native dopplegangers
for control of a backwater double-planet colony.
Nonhuman Biotechnologies
Butler, Octavia. Xenogenesis (Doubleday, 1989).
Seemingly benevolent aliens biologically modify humans to
adapt them to their own society.
Harry Harrison. West of Eden (Ibooks, 2000). Struggle
between early humans and evolved dinosaurs who have
mastered primitive biotechnology.
Williams, Walter Jon. Angel Station (Tor, 1989). Free
traders encounter high-biotech aliens in a world where
genetic engineering is common.
Bioterrorism, Outbreaks, and Medical Thrillers
Bear, Greg. Blood Music (Ibooks, 2002). Intelligent bioengineered
diseases transform the world through
nanotechnology; a classic bio-nanotech disaster novel.
Bear, Greg. Darwin’s Radio (Del Rey, 2000). Diseases
sleeping in the human genome return as the trigger for
evolutionary change. Sequel Darwin’s Children.
Dragon’s Island and “terraforming” in Seetee Ship (both
1951).
Bioengineered Constructs, Plants, and Animals
Crichton, Michael. Jurassic Park (Ballantine, 1990).
Cloned dinosaurs cause havoc.
Easton, Thomas A. Sparrowhawk (Wildside Press,
2000). A future world filled with bio-constructs and biovehicles.
Martin, George R.R. Tuf Voyaging (Meisha Merlin,
2003). The adventures of a freelance interstellar ecological
engineer.
Shelley, Mary. Frankenstein, or the Modern Prometheus
(Pocket, 2004). Originally published in 1818, this is the
classic story of a scientist’s creation of artificial life and its
tragic consequences, and is often considered the first science
fiction novel.
Cryonics
Bear, Greg. Heads (Tor, 1990). On future Luna, the
arrival of a consignment of cryogenically-preserved heads
leads to intrigue.
Niven, Larry. A World Out of Time. (Del Rey, 1986).
Cryogenics patient wakes up in a radically-changed
dystopian future.