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 In Prey, bestselling author Michael Crichton introduces bad guys  that are too small to be seen with the naked eye but no less deadly or  intriguing than the runaway dinosaurs that made 1990's Jurassic Park such a  blockbuster success.
   High-tech whistle-blower Jack Forman used to specialize in programming computers  to solve problems by mimicking the behavior of efficient wild animals--swarming  bees or hunting hyena packs, for example. Now he's unemployed and is finally  starting to enjoy his new role as stay-at-home dad. All would be domestic bliss  if it were not for Jack's suspicions that his wife, who's been behaving  strangely and working long hours at the top-secret research labs of Xymos  Technology, is having an affair. When he's called in to help with her hush-hush  project, it seems like the perfect opportunity to see what his wife's been  doing, but Jack quickly finds there's a lot more going on in the lab than an  illicit affair. Within hours of his arrival at the remote testing center, Jack  discovers his wife's firm has created self-replicating nanotechnology--a literal  swarm of microscopic machines. Originally meant to serve as a military eye in  the sky, the swarm has now escaped into the environment and is seemingly intent  on killing the scientists trapped in the facility. The reader realizes early,  however, that Jack, his wife, and fellow scientists have more to fear from the  hidden dangers within the lab than from the predators without.   The monsters may be smaller in this book, but Crichton's skill for suspense has  grown, making Prey a scary read that's hard to set aside, though not  without its minor flaws. The science in this novel requires more explanation  than did the cloning of dinosaurs, leading to lengthy and sometimes dry academic  lessons. And while the coincidence of Xymos's new technology running on the same  program Jack created at his previous job keeps the plot moving, it may be more  than some readers can swallow. But, thanks in part to a sobering foreword in  which Crichton warns of the real dangers of technology that continues to evolve  more quickly than common sense, Prey succeeds in gripping readers with a  tense and frightening tale of scientific suspense. --Benjamin Reese
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