QUOTE(dishwasher @ Jan 20 2009, 01:45 PM)
A fellow fan! To be honest, I don't have timeline myself. I heard it was kinda 'meh' and never got down to buying it. The rest of the books are OK. Prey was good. State of Fear is abit controversial because of the whole global warming issue. Next was actually disappointing - I somehow felt it lacked a plot, a protagonist, and a clear direction. Instead of was a bunch of stories chained together at the end. In the end it just turned out to be a pamphlet warning us about the dangers of genetic engineering.
Am now waiting for his posthumous book.
Timeline is a pretty decent book. I felt that it had better explanation of the time travelling hoohah than the movie, but the movie has better character development/interaction. Prey started off well - Loved the gradual buildup of the portrayal of the Swarm's AI, but the final battle at the cave seemed like something out of a B-grade alien movie.
QUOTE(dishwasher @ Jan 24 2009, 03:49 PM)
As promised, here's the first review of Crichton's books:
The Andromeda StrainThis was the first sci-fi thriller Crichton wrote, and a remarkable effort for a first novel. The basic plot is based on the premise 'what if our space probes and astronauts were to accidentally carry back an alien microorganism'. The novel starts with the retrieval of a fallen low orbit probe in a small American town, Piedmont. It doesn't take long for the agents dispatched to collect the probe to realize the town has died, and they follow suit soon enough.
What follows is a dramatic recount of a week in a high tech underground lab, where four scientist work to find out what was contained within the probe, and seek a cure. Together with them are the only two survivors from Piedmont - an old man with a drinking problem and a child with colic, two highly different individuals that somehow share a trait making them immune to the alien microorganism.
The book climaxes as the team realizes the microorganism has spread above ground, and that they are running out of time to save humanity. A secret from one of the team members complicates matters further, delivering a explosive end to the book.
It is in this book that Crichton first showcases his 'fiction as a real event' style of writing. He peppers his book with memos, declassified documents, computer printouts etc, oft times making the reader wonder if the event actually happened. He would later use this style of writing in most of his books to great effect, especially his masterpiece: Jurassic Park, but that is a review for another day.
Andromeda Strain is a nice sci-fi book with lots of technical description, but the ending is very WTF. Too abrupt and sleazy for my liking, as if Crichton has nothing else to write and hastily ended the story. Still, it's worth reading.
One thing I find with Crichton's books is that he tends to drift away towards the late stages of his story and tends to end the story in an abrupt and awkward manner. Prey, Andromeda Strain, and even Jurassic Park suffered the same fate. In fact, I preferred the movie's version of Jurassic Park's story where they edited out the crazy parts eg velociraptor nest.