Prey 225
Prey | |
author | Michael Crichton |
pages | 367 |
publisher | Harper Collins |
rating | Excellent - Among his best |
reviewer | cybrpnk2 |
ISBN | 0066214122 |
summary | The latest sci-fi on nanotechnology from the author of Andromeda Strain and Jurassic Park |
In some ways willing suspension of disbelief has to be applied less to the technology depicted and more to the relationships between our protagonists Jake and Julia. They're the typical Silicon Valley couple, all right, but oh how conveniently their relationship advances the plot. He's the between-jobs programming team manager who's specialized in code that models distributed processing and genetic algorithms. She's the cute PR talking head who is lining up funding for the revolutionary Xymos nanobots. He's the cool, loving house-dad that takes care of the cute kids. She's the always-working cold bitch who's having an affair -- isn't she? With the tanned surfing god Xymos exec we hiss at as soon as we meet him? Or is this whole plot line perhaps a little too obvious after being set up by page 18? Maybe Crichton has something a little more twisted in mind for the 350 pages that follow ...
Yep, he sure does, and as fast as helicopters can fly we're at the secretive Xymos desert lab in Nevada where nothing is as it seems. Those swirling little dust devils out there on the parking lot security cameras are considerably more menacing than Taz in a Loony Tunes cartoon, but damned if anybody will give Jack a straight answer about just how ... or especially why. Seems the escaped particles that make up the clouds have been programmed with distributed computing algorithms Jack came up with in his last job -- Xymos wants HIM to tell THEM what's going on. Uh, oh -- Jack used the concept of predator / prey stalking dynamics to keep distributed agents focused on a concrete goal.
Jack's subsequent experiences, experiments, thought processes, and realizations lead the reader into a fascinating exploration of the concept of hive mind. In one sense this is a book about prejudice -- people are the most evolved social mammals on Earth, and as such are always misinterpreting the capabilities, actions and behaviors of a swarm that has neither leaders or followers, only members. As such, Prey is a rare SF book that truly does explore a uniquely alien life form with some very interesting twists. It's also a thought-provoking possible example of Vernor Vinge's technological singularity concept.
It's a good book and it's going to make a great movie. If you just can't wait for the movie, though, no problem. Crichton's three-act structure for Prey follows the well-trod path of a trio of 50s-style sci-fi movie classics: Tremors , Them! , and Invasion of the Body Snatchers . Check 'em out and watch 'em in order after you read Prey for a fun follow-up. To include the tension of Jack and Julia's romantic triangle, watch Casablanca first ... and remember, a kiss is just a kiss, as time goes by.
You can purchase Prey from bn.com. Slashdot welcomes readers' book reviews -- to see your own review here, read the book review guidelines, then visit the submission page.
Prey? (Score:1, Offtopic)
Re:Prey? (Score:2, Funny)
Plausible Story? (Score:2)
Wouldn't evolution have constructed lifeforms of this kind long ago if they were stable and competetive in a natural environment?
Stable and competitive? (Score:1)
Who says they'd be stable and competitive? Nanomonsters, grey goo, and most other hypothetical boogymen are the antithesis of "stable and competitive". They only have to exist long enough to devour the entire food supply (us) before becoming extinct.
Similarly, Bengal tigers would probably not thrive if you dropped a bunch of them off in northern Vermont. But they could still do a lot of damage in the short-term.
Re:Plausible Story? (Score:2)
Oops, got side-tracked there. Actually I wanted to say that 'mindless hive swarm' describes humanity pretty well. Our structures (cities, businesses, networks) follow Zipf's law whether we believe we're in control or not.
Re:Plausible Story? (Score:2)
Agent Smith had a political agenda (Score:2)
All life is a swarm. We share a common ancestor with every virus.
Re:Plausible Story? (Score:1)
Wouldn't evolution have constructed lifeforms of this kind long ago if they were stable and competetive in a natural environment? (2002 Köhntopp)
No.
Köhntopp, Kris. "Plausible Story?" Slashdot. 6 Dec. 2002 <http://books.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=47035&
Re:Plausible Story? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Plausible Story? (Score:2)
Exactly. Bacteria are the ultimate nanomachines, far more complex and efficient than anything we will be able to design for years and years. Yet no one is worried about bacteria replicating exponentially and turning the entire world into gray goo or having swarms of flying malicious bacteria that are intelligent and attack people. I found it very hard to suspend my disbelief at the incredible feats the nanobots performed in Prey.
Hire this guy... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Hire this guy... (Score:2)
Re:Hire this guy... (Score:2)
Re:Hire this guy... (Score:3, Interesting)
Thanks! Check out more of my stuff at SciFiToday [scifitoday.com].
Re:Hire this guy... (Score:2)
rickyjames
I believe he has had only one really good book (Score:4, Insightful)
If anybody feels the same way I do, I can recommend this book I will then read it, else it holds no chance.
You didn't read Jurassic Park? (Score:2)
(And the movie would have been 5 hours long.)
I've read all his books, and to me, JP stands out by far. Those others you listed (Congo, Terminal Man, Sphere) had interesting ideas, but were not his best work. I believe if you liked Andromeda Strain, you will like this book. I bought it as a present for my brother, and started reading the opening pages... next thing I knew, page 100. Whoops.
Re:You didn't read Jurassic Park? (Score:4, Interesting)
I totally agree on Congo and Terminal man - interesting ideas, but they just didn't cut it and were lacking something. However, I thought Sphere was amazing and engaging. I guess it just depends on your tastes.
My favorite book of his is probably Travels, a autobiography of sorts in which Michael Crichton relates all of the wierd things he has seen in the late sixties, the seventies, and the early eighties. The cool thing is that he doesn't write it as an autobiography, but more like an explorer. It is a very cool read, pick it up if you haven't. He also has a similar book called Five Patients, in which he studies our health care system and uses five example patients to show what is good, bad, and ugly about health care.
Re:You didn't read Jurassic Park? (Score:2)
Hey Sphere is my favourite too! JP is my second favourite, but Sphere always stood out.
Congo the movie sucked, but the book was decent.
Timeline sucks.
Jurassic Park is definitely the best one that was made into a movie. Andromeda Stain is second best.
Re:I believe he has had only one really good book (Score:2, Insightful)
I've read a few of MC's books, and guess I enjoyed JP, but I'm mostly disenchanted with MC's perennial theme of "technology is bad, and technologists are at once stupid, arrogant, and evil." Prey sounds like more of the same to me, so I'm not sure I'll bother reading it.
Re:I believe he has had only one really good book (Score:3, Insightful)
airframe (Score:2)
Maybe I'm just looking at it through rose-tinted reading glasses but the Andromeda Strain and Congo, I thought, were two of his absolute best. Sphere was totally engrossing at first then kind of a let down. Terminal Man was certainly interesting, although I can not remember much from it being great. Never read Jurassic Park, though.
I was in high-school when I read all these though. Maybe he has lost it, however.
A movie? Depends... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: A movie? Depends... (Score:2)
> Indeed, Spielberg did a fantastic job with Jurassic Park.
Feh. Superb dinosaurs, tolerable plot, third-rate actors, execrable script. Never have so few characters spoken so many bad lines in so few movies (the sequel was actually worse!). I've heard better dialog in porno flicks.
"Classic Crichton" ? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:"Classic Crichton" ? (Score:2)
Maybe... just maybe... (Score:1)
Lawyer fetish. (Score:4, Funny)
I hope the microbes in this book get some lawyer while he's on the can...
I don't like spoilers, but anyone read this? I must know if there's a lawyer eating involved, and if the book is worth my time.
Thank you, slashdot folks. You have always proven yourselves helpful.
I used to love his stuff (Score:5, Interesting)
Now I don't enjoy his books at all and I find him to be sort of behind the curve (but in terms of what the general public knows, he is still ahead of the curve).
I'd much rather read Neal Stephenson in terms of books that have a technical backing to the story. And NS wrote about nano way before MC. MC is just jumping on the bandwagon - and will likely cause a "stir" with it simply because more people read his stuff.
Generally speaking, if a lot of people read and like an author, I'm finding that I don't tend to like it.
Maybe I'm just a dick, or an elitist snob. But if a book makes the NYT bestseller list, or Oprah's list, then I steer clear of it.
(that said, I did enjoy Cold Mountain)
I hate Neal Stephenson. (Score:2)
I've always hated his books because to me they had no realistic technical backing and it appeared that he was trying to cover up by making things obscure/hazy/long winded. Techinical fantasy, sure.
But for realistic techinical I rather read Robert J. Sawyer.
Re:I hate Neal Stephenson. (Score:2)
I like RJS, but, huh?
He only includes enough real science to enable his philosophical musing. It's hardly realistic.
For well-researched hard SF, try Clarke, Bear, Egan, or Baxter.
Re:I used to love his stuff (Score:2)
"Jumping on the bandwagon?" Has there been a rush of fiction books about nanotechnology lately that I'm not aware of? The Diamond Age, by itself, does not a bandwagon make.
Maybe I'm just a dick, or an elitist snob.
No "maybe" about it. People who hold the opinion that that which is popular cannot also be good are wrong as often as they're right.
Re:I used to love his stuff (Score:2)
Because Neal Stephenson is pretty much a nobody that only you have discovered. You know that his last book was on the NYT best seller list, right? Guess you should steer clear of Neal from now on.
Stephenson (Score:2)
I need my fix.
Re:I used to love his stuff (Score:2, Interesting)
Wait a minute, I thought you said you've read all of Crichton? You've forgotten about The Andromeda Strain. That was nano before the term was part of the vernacular. Not sure about Neal's age, but I'm willing to bet that Andromeda Strain was written before Stephenson got started.
Hardly makes Crichton jumping on the bandwagon. One might even go so far as to say that Crichton helped build that wagon in terms of putting real science into SF.
Re:I used to love his stuff (Score:2)
Just because Crichton is just getting into nano now doesn't mean it won't be a good story. I read "Andromeda Strain" one afternoon in the late 70's when I was in high school and it was a great read. I read it again a couple years ago and still enjoyed it. It's OK if MC is targetting a wider audience than NS or GB, the book could still be good.
Believe it or not, there is intelligent fiction that makes it into the best-selling lists. I haven't read this book, but another author, who happens to be my favorite, Terry Pratchett, is quite big in the U.S. and huge in the U.K. I've been a fan since "The Light Fantastic" and I was quite surprised how popular he ended up being since his books are often quite complex and the humor is often both subtle and obscure (how many popular authors do you know who routinely make Latin puns?).
Re:I used to love his stuff (Score:2)
So is JeffK.
>with a real faith that the reader's foolish disbelief will be overwhelmed by a machine-gun progression of ideas.
So he tosses so much crap at the reader that he hopes something, anything, will come out as semi-intelligent?
Re:I used to love his stuff (Score:2)
I think you're partly correct on that. NS's work has more interesting language, but often a bit too much. IMO, NS is in bad need of an editor. A good 20-25% of "Cryptonomicon" could've been cut without any harm to the plots or the technology HOWTO asides. It'd also do NS some good to work on better endings. If he would spend half the time he spends setting up and describing his detailed plots to his finales, his books wouldn't fizzle out so much in the end. The 10 page wrap up of "The Diamond Age" is a prime example of that.
Re:I used to love his stuff (Score:2)
I enjoy his writing at length; not every word needs to be used to advance the plot, I think it works well to flesh some things out in great detail.
It'd also do NS some good to work on better endings.
Definitely.
Diamond Age was particularly disappointing in that respect -- felt like he had a page limit to fit into and he'd just realised he was about to run up against it. Unforgivable, since other parts of the book dragged a bit.
Timeline to be released in 2003 (Score:4, Interesting)
I would like to see Andromeda Strain redone as another movie -- it was an excellent read and view, but I could see some major differences in how it would be adapted for today's audience. It would be great.
Re:Timeline to be released in 2003 (Score:2)
Timeline should make a great, fun movie though, and I look forward to it! Actually, considering the complete sh*t that's out now, I can't wait...
Re:Timeline to be released in 2003 (Score:2)
Only if they could fix the ending somehow to be a little less "reset-button-esque." Sure, the idea that the organism mutates into a harmless form in short order is scientifically sound, but it results in a pretty lame ending to a story.
Re:Timeline to be released in 2003 (Score:2)
That doesn't mean the movie can't be good, though. Since typically 90% of a book gets chopped out and rewritten anyway, it could actually redeem the book, although I won't hold my breath given the last couple of JP movies.
Re:Timeline to be released in 2003 (Score:2)
It's not just you. I had the same exact feeling from Timeline. I hadn't read a Crichton since Jurrasic Park, then I picked up Timeline and the difference in his writing style was huge. As soon as they introduced the character in Timeline who was a Medeival nut (forget his name), it was painfully obvious how, in a movie, it would end. Sure enough, he ended the book that way and I just felt let down.
Not to be a prick.. but.. (Score:2, Offtopic)
They?re
that?s
Crichton?s
Check ?em
watch ?em
That's what it looks like to me.
damn it! (Score:2)
Re:damn it! (Score:2)
Wouldn't have helped. Copyright protects works, not ideas. You can't, for example, copyright the idea of a book involving runaway nanotechnology.
Besides, Crichton himself owns the notional "copyright" on this idea, having used it before in The Andromeda Strain.
Re:damn it! (Score:2)
Re:damn it! (Score:2)
Crichton isn't really an SF author (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Crichton isn't really an SF author (Score:5, Insightful)
So there.
Re:Crichton isn't really an SF author (Score:5, Funny)
Funny, I read Jurassic Park and came away an appreciation of how lame an author can be when he picks up a buzzword (chaos, in JP and nanotech here) but doesn't really have a clue what it means.
BTW, I mean lame in many senses: uncool and "marked by stiffness" and "lacking needful or desirable substance".
Re:Crichton isn't really an SF author (Score:2)
"An appreciation for how arrogant *fictional* engineers and programmers, written to be arrogant" would be more on the money. Remember that every character in the book is saying words bcos Crichton wants them to, not bcos of a psychological assessment of all engineers and programmers!
Back in the real world, shit that can get you killed has backups, and backups of the backups. If you don't, you get what you deserve, which in this case is to be eaten by ravenous dinosaurs.
Grab.
Have you actually read the books? (Score:2)
I personally love every one of MC's books and own them all. He spices a touch of science fiction, but uses the same idea as Sixth Day with "the not so distant future". He takes new technologies that are more than likely going to become standard ... and puts them in his books. Some people really need to understand that there's a reason there are so many books, obviously no one is going to like them all.
Not Them...THEM! (Score:2)
Agree with the review (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Agree with the review (Score:3, Insightful)
I've got several of Crichton's books, and that's what always sticks in my mind. Giant dinosaurs? Killer virii from outer space? Alien extraterrestrial spheres crashing into Earth from outer space (as one friend described Sphere once)? More giant dinosaurs? Nope, it's a book about a TEAM! (And you can always bet on who is gonna survive and who is gonna die).
Of course, some books like Eaters of the dead and Disclosure dont fit into the Crichton stereotype, and that's A good thing (tm) in my opinion. Real writers don't write a gazillion books with the same idea over and over (well, some do, but probably shouldn't).
Anyway, I haven't read Prey, and I'm looking forward to giving it a try. In paperback, of course.
I can't wait (Score:2)
It's been a few months since I finished Timeline and I'm in some serious Michael Crichton Voodoo-Science(tm) withdrawl.
Just one question, though...
If we can't figure out time travel, and we're relying on quantum theory in such a way that when we try to send someone through time the person who arrives was actually sent from a parallel reality where they do understand time travel and not actually the person we sent...why do transcription errors happen? Can't we just rely on a parallel reality where they don't have transcription errors?
Women in Crichton Books (Score:5, Insightful)
That sums up pretty much every female in every one of his books. Crichton is like Lucas, he has some great ideas, interesting twists, and generally strong plots. His character development, particularly of women, barely qualifies as one dimensional. His dialogue is laughable at best. He should come up with the ideas and let other people who can actually write do the writing part.
Re:Women in Crichton Books (Score:3, Funny)
I thought Princess Leia was pretty three dimensional - especially in that metal bikini outfit. Rrrr.
Formula for a Chrichton novel... (Score:2, Insightful)
Makes for good books though doesn't it? Jurassic Park, Congo...others.
Re:Formula for a Chrichton novel... (Score:2, Funny)
2) Man appears to be successful in challenging nature
3) Nature awakens and bites man in the ass!
4) ???
5) Profit!!
Formula for a Grisham novel (Score:2)
2. Bad Guys find out and try to kill protaganist.
3. Government agency gets involved on behalf of Bad Guys.
4. Protaganist comes through by threatening to reveal Bad Guy secrets to world.
Does it have an ending? (Score:3, Interesting)
I respect that the stories do end and that it's over -- but you have to look at it from a story arc. You can run the arc a number of ways, but essentially in a mystery/suspense you've got this curve that's going up and up and up, and then has a climax or two, then comes down.
I always got the feeling from his books of the curve going up, up, up, and then... flatline. No climax, just like "Oh, 300 pages, time's up." Sort of thing.
I thought it might just have been my problem with one or two of his stories, but after reading a few of them I started to feel it something more like the "Crichton Climax"(tm), (or anti-climax, if you will).
Re:Does it have an ending? (Score:2)
Just my 2 kopeks.
-DVK
Disappointing (Score:2, Insightful)
I would recommend Andromeda Strain, Eaters of the Dead, Congo, Rising Sun and Disclosure instead.
The Chronicle's headline (Score:4, Informative)
"Crichton stretches out another nano-idea" brightened my morning the other day.
Crichton not admirable (Score:3, Insightful)
Sphere may be the worst book I've ever (tried) to read, but it made a reasonable (rental) movie.
Deus ex machina? (Score:2)
I thought it was a good book. It's not a classic, but it's not The Lost World. And it probably won't make as terrible a movie as Congo. It was a nice break from more plot heavy books: kind of techno-mindlessness and a leads to b leads to c.
Like I said, though, it just kind of came to a rather disorganized end. I'm ok with stories that don't wrap everything up, but this one just kind of petered out.
-h-
The two skills of writing (Score:3, Insightful)
There are some writers who clearly excel at both. The first that comes to mind is Pat Conroy.
Crichton (note the correct spelling, which is used selectively in the original post) falls into a category of writers with superb storytelling skills but merely competent language skill. Also in this category is Grisham. I suspect it may even have aided them in their success; in a country where supposedly the average adult reads at a fifth grade level maybe dumbing down the language is what's needed for mass market appeal.
That said, I like Crichton's past books. Sometimes it's fun to be able to zip through a book without taxing the language processing lobes of the brain much or thinking about how the story was delivered to you. But oftentimes I leave his work feeling that the story was shovelled at me with no finesse, or style, or creativity.
Eh... (Score:2, Insightful)
If you actually like to have a challenging text and interesting things to think about, check out Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon and Snow Crash.
Mediocre "Body Snatchers"-style Story (Score:2)
This post will contain minor spoilers. Read at your own risk.
If you've enjoyed Chrichton's past novels, there's a good chance you'll enjoy Prey, but it's really just a collection of tired sci-fi cliches made to look new by the addition of nanotechnology. I won't comment much on the actual science of the book, since I really don't know much about nanotech, but some of it just seemed a tad hokey. The whole Body Snatchers idea seemed both implausible and overused.
Timeline was much better; I cared about its characters a lot more, which were more fully-developed. Most of Prey's characters, especially the "hacker" types, are nothing more than Star Trek redshirts: they get few sentences of exposition, and a few chapters later, they're dead. The most interesting ones get killed off first, too. Also, all of the hacker characters fit into a broad geek stereotype: there's the quiet geek, the punk grrl geek, the fat slob geek, and the anal geek. Not much imagination there.
Overall, it's entertaining, if you don't think too much about it, but Crichton's done better.
Point of Singularity (Score:4, Interesting)
The article talks about a "Singularity" in humankind's development, an event where man develops a machine that will outhink him. This leads to an acceleration, a new evolution, an exponential runaway beyond any hope of control.
The author explains why this will occur, how, and when; between 2005 and 2030. He also gets into ramifications of a post-Singularity world, and the paths that may lead us there, along with some pros and cons of each choice.
There are references to some works of science fiction (though none from Chriton), and a passing reference to the possibility of engendering a set of laws in the machines. Surprisingly, Asimov's Laws Of Robotics was not metioned.
His final quote is taken from Freeman Dyson:
This asks the question - when Man changes, will our God change as well?
Another hate-filled, bigoted book about our kind! (Score:5, Funny)
The ants in Them.
The rats in Willard.
The bees in The Swarm.
The Borg in Star Trek.
And now the nanites in Prey.
As a Slashdotter, I am grossly offended by hive-minds being consistently portrayed as the bad guys. I hereby call subliminally to all my fellow
Respectfully,
536185 of 630000
Re:Another hate-filled, bigoted book about our kin (Score:2, Funny)
612884 of 630000
Cute kids (Score:2)
Just for once, I'd like the cute kids to be introduced only to die horribly and painfully soon after. That might make his books barely tolerable even if the rest of it is one cinematic plot device after another.
Movies (Score:3, Funny)
This is my main complaint with the Crichton books in the past 10 years. All of the ones I read are basically movie scripts "disguised" as books. I read The Great Train Robbery (one of his books from the 70s) a couple years ago, and it was much better writing.
Available in eBook format (Score:2)
M@
Deja vu (Score:2)
Re:Deja vu (Score:2)
Judging by the rickyjames in his e-mail address, there's no plagiarism involved though! Good review.
Re:Deja vu (Score:2)
Hmm... Classic Crichton? Let me guess... (Score:4, Funny)
AND SOMETHING GOES TERRIBLY WRONG!!!
What does grey goo eat? (Score:5, Insightful)
The dominant energy source around us is organic matter. You can't get much energy out of eating inorganic matter (rock) because, aside from carbon (coal, graphite, diamond), it's mostly well-oxidized and sitting in a free-energy minimum. That's why we don't burn rocks other than coal in the fireplace. This means that the nanobeasties would be competing with natural life forms for organic matter and I doubt they would do well in the competition.
The machinery by which living things extract energy from organic matter is quite sophisticated and I don't see any prospect for engineered nanotechnology out-competing basic bacteria on this front.
Similarly, if most of the energetically favorable raw material around is organic, if the nanobeasties are to reproduce, they will likely be built of organic compounds, so they are again competing with bacteria that have a 4 billion year head start in optimizing themselves for the environment. If they are built of inorganic compounds or make much use of elements that are not generally found in living matter, then they will need to use much of their metabolic output to fighting entropy as they purify (reduce sand to silicon, for instance) and synthesize the necessary building blocks.
Until the question of where a nanobeast gets its food and how it reproduces are plausibly explained (we don't need reduction to practice, but some plausible background is necessary), I will not take scenarios involving huge swarms of malevolent grey goo seriously, even in fiction.
Spoilerific reply (Score:3, Informative)
This is science fantasy however so you must remember that Crichton will give the nanoswarms strengths or weaknesses based on how it fits his plot, not on how it fits the realistic constraints or ramifications such tech might have if it were real. In Prey evolution and emergent behavior are treated as magical forces than can cause anything to happen. Within two weeks of creation nanoswarms that couldn't even handle 8 mph wind have become capable of totally taking over a human's body and consciousness. I think. Even after reading the entire book I'm still not sure what exactly these swarms were and were not supposed to be capable of. I doubt Crichton does either.
In the end it was a forgetable book to me, but not a waste of time. I really enjoyed Jurassic Park, Sphere, Congo and the Andromeda Strain but just like Grisham Cricthon seems to be getting worse with each book he puts out. If they do make a movie I'll probably watch it just to see a scene where 5 humans "herd" themselves away from the hunting nanoswarms. Possibly the funniest scene ever in a Crichton book.
Re:Spoilerific reply (Score:2)
The swarms didn't eat the birds because the birds spent all their time flocking and apparently, despite becoming smart enough to imitate human consciousness, the swarms were unable to hunt anything that flocked.
Light (Score:3, Informative)
In short, the nanoswarm is powered mostly by light, but at a few parts Crichton implies that the E. coli has mutated to consume mammalian flesh as well.
Travels (Score:3)
It simply describes, in no particular order, the places he has gone, spiritually and physically. Just anecdotes, really.
Every chapter can be read seperately, perfect for reading out load. Some of them are really funny; swimming with sharks, sex with celebs, spoon-bending parties etc.
Anyway, I found a bunch of little gems in the book...
Prey -- maybe not. (Score:2)
Can someone recommend something to me? I just got done rereading Harry Potter (guilty pleasure), so I'm headed for the bookstore tonight. Here's sort of what I'm interested in: I'd like to read something by Niven, Gaiman, Stephenson (even the Big U), Gibson, Bret Ellis, Eric Nylund or Chuck Palahniuk, but I've already read everything they've written. I'm looking for something on that range; I'm not ready to read anything too brainy at the moment -- getting ready to embark on another Karen Armstrong book...
Re:Prey -- maybe not. (Score:2)
The fourth book is almost done - A Feast For Crows.
I re-read them three times in the first four months I had them.
Puppetman.
Re:Prey -- maybe not. (Score:2)
Personally, I'm looking forward to Cory Doctorow's "Down & Out in the Magic Kingdom", but I don't think that'll be out until Jan or Feb. I'm going to read "Prey" and a couple others in the meantime, reviews be dammed.
Same old 50's B-Movie plot (Score:2)
Hero dispatches said horror after it kills arrogant scientists.
Conclusion (voice-over): "There Are Some Things That Man Was Not Meant To Know".
I'll stick with Neal Stephenson, thanks.
Definitely not his best (Score:3, Insightful)
It really felt like Crichton himself lost interest after the first act and had an intern finish off the story from there. He sets up the science and the mystery very nicely in the beginning, then turns it into a stupid "predator hunts prey, prey kills predator" story that's been done much better thousands of times before (even by Crichton himself). He even goes so far as to completely and intentionally ruin every possible element of suspense by dropping extremely heavy hints and using copious amounts of foreshadowing at every possible turn. By the first ten pages of the second section, I knew how the book would end and who would die.
As if the plot flaws aren't enough, Crichton chose to write this book in the first-person, which is uncommon for him. I'm not sure what his reasoning was there. At first I enjoyed the perspective; Crichton's third-person narrative tends to be one-dimensional and patronizing, and in the beginning it looked like that was going to change. But, like everything else, that too stopped being the case after the first section. It seems like Crichton really struggled with the fact that he had limited himself to being able to tell the story from only one point of view. At one point, he even goes so far as to have the narrator describe, in detail, a scene that takes place without him present, explaining it by saying that the narrator saw the events later by watching security tapes. Nevermind that he's already told us the security tapes only show ten-frame intervals from each camera and cycle through all the cameras in this huge facility, nor do they record sound (and yet, strangely, the narrator somehow heard the dialog in this particular scene).
In short, while it's not a horrible book, Prey is no Andromeda Strain and no Jurassic Park. It's not even a Lost World. It's better than Timeline, but only just barely.
I've been there.... (Score:3, Funny)
Don't you hate that? I mean, you go through all the trouble and background checks and retinal scans to get to these cool secretive labs and then, almost immediately, everything goes straight to hell.
Oh well, at least that won't happen this next time. I've got this great job lined up at a place called 'Black Mesa'. I'm pretty sure everything there is on the up-and-up.
A few interesting facts about Crichton (Score:2)
He's extremely rich - from movies like Jurassic Park, and especially the TV show he created, ER, one of the most successful shows in history. He's got hundreds of millions of dollars.
He was going through a nasty divorce with his wife while writing Prey, a fact which perhaps influences the good-dad-bad-mom dynamic in the early part of the book.
sucky "science" though. (Score:2)
They use Thermite to blow up swarms of nanobots. Except thermite does not explode, only burn with a very high temperature.
He confuses photovoltaic with piezoelectric in several places, this is high-school stuff...
Many of the measurements are off. One device is described as one billionth of an inch. Only problem is that this is about the size of a single atom, and thus it's inconceivable that you could construct a nanobot this small.
His concept of "evolution" is absurd, and would appear so to anyone with even a very basic understanding of evolution. Evolution has to do with the survival of the more fit organisms. "evolution" can not be used to explain that one swarm of nanobots learn to evade the thermite after watching another nearby be anihilated by it. This is called "learning" and is not the same as evolution.
The list goes on. Frankly, for me it was enough to make the entire story more annoying than enjoyable. Everything doesn't need to be 100% realistic, but it's too stupid when a person writing about science doesn't even know high-school stuff like what a the photovoltaic effect is.
Re:Classic Crichton is like Classic Clancy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Yes (Score:2)
Great Train Robbery fact-based (Score:1)
http://www.canoe.ca/CNEWSScienceNews/train_may7-a
Re:Chrichton's books (Score:2, Interesting)
at any rate, it's a hell of a book, and a stark departure from his usual works. the closest comparison is probably to The Terminal Man (incidentally one of my favorites), but only because they both deal with medical stories.
pick it up if you get a chance. amazon link [amazon.com]
Re:I like to read. (Score:2, Insightful)
By the way, this is completely off-topic and I deserve the moderation.