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Gene Helfman
Gene Helfman is an animal behaviorist turned conservation biologist turned novelist. With a PhD in Ecology from Cornell University, Gene was on the faculty of the University of Georgia for thirty years, authoring four books on fish and marine conservation and dozens of related scientific papers. He spent much of his professional career underwater demonstrating that fish are smarter than conventionally thought. In an effort to get the conservation message to a larger audience, he has turned to writing screenplays and novels, on the premise that more people read fiction than non-fiction. He has published two novels: Beyond The Human Realm, about a captive orca released into the wild; and FINS, A Novel of Relentless Satire, about sentient sharks. Both novels have won national awards. Gene and his wife Dr. Judy Meyer, an aquatic ecologist, live on Lopez Island in Washington State.
Fins combines elements of the typical shark horror story with modern science, in a unique, humorous, shark-friendly manner. Fins turns on the theme of the reprehensible practice of finning. Sentient sharks, led by a matriarch, target logical victims. The sharks involved are intelligent, compassionate, maternal, and goal-oriented, in league with a female scientist and an African-American tech wizard, all battling malevolent white guys.