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Prey CD

Prey CD

List Price: $49.95
Your Price: $32.97
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Crichton's Finally Back!
Review: Michael Crichton's career started with high-tech novels that were thought-provoking and very suspenseful. Then he moved into the Jurassic Park field, where he terrorized us with a nature-runs-amock plot. But ever since he tangled with corporate law in Disclosure, Crichton's efforts have been less than stellar. Airframe was lame and boring, and Timeline was long-winded and not very exciting. But I'm happy to say that the real Crichton, the Jurrasic Park and Andromeda Strain Crichton is back. And boy is this a great welcome party!

Of course, he does not let go of his favorite theme; nature vs. mankind. In Prey, a family man named Jack (can you have a more average-joe name?) is thrown into a virtual nightmare when he is brought to the Nevada desert to help a research group with a problematic new technology.

This group, led by Jack's wife (who is now in the hospital after a serious car accident), has developped small camera-like atom particles that can run in minuscule places (like the human body for example) to take pictures. Only, they have come to realize that their strain has begun evolving on its own and that one of them has escape. And soon enough, they find themselves faced with something much more dangerous: a computerized plague that kills remorselessly everything that comes on its path.

Crichton is great at writing high-adrenalyn suspense scenes. Prey does not disappoints. The moment Jack steps foot in the desert, the tension starts building. And building. And building. The levels of suspense are so great at times that it's just impossible to put the book down. This is a littke like John Carpenter's The Thing, set in the desert with a lot of technological mumbo-jumbo talk. But fortunately, Crichton's technological writing is done in a way that almost everyone will be able to follow without getting lost in all the high-tech talk.

If you can get passed Crichton's simplistic writing (sometimes, much too simplisitc) and corny dialogue, what you'll find is a thrill ride that'll make you bite your nails to the bone. Prey isn't a great novel. It's fun, action-packed and highly entertaining. Everything you've come to expect from a good Crichton yarn, and more.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Pushing it.
Review: There is no Crichton fan who will be able to say this is his best, because it is not. I am a a lawyer with a pre-med degree so obviously Chrichton and other physicians in writing draw me. I love the way Dr C. sets up a possibility and brings it to life for his readers.
This time he dreamt up a possibility, asked us to believe him, we tried, then he made us feel foolish. Still love the guy though.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Crichton's cutting-edge-hi-tech, yet lucid SF novel
Review: Crichton's Prey was great - though I felt somewhat let down after finishing the book. The concepts, a cutting-edge-hi-tech amalgam of distributed computing, nanotech and genetic engineering (emergent self optimizing behaviour + triumphs of molecular manufacturing i.e. using e-coli bacteria to create nanoassemblers which inturn assemble molecular machines like cameras etc, which have memory, solar cell particles to sustain themselves and organize using goal-seeking PREDPREY distributed algorithms to mimick vivid shapes and forms, which as usual go out of control or do they. . . never mind; and have to be exterminated, else will take over the human race) are great, but the ending is not very inspiring and actually a bit disappointing. Killing the villain bacteria instantly with bacteriophages/viruses ? The content handling at times is dry and clumsy. Of course the story is fast paced and chilling too at times - he has focussed a lot on character development, which he was criticised of not doing in his earlier novels. The entire book is a first person narrative. All in all a score of 3.5/5 would suffice. His lucid style of writing though is prevalent here too, through which he seems to have developed a knack of scaring us ; readers will immediately vouch for the negative implications of molecular manufacturing . . .

Shamit

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not nearly his best, Written Like a movie
Review: This book is such a quick read, it's apparent it was put together with cinema in mind. The characters are so thinly developed, they have no substance or impact on the story.

As a reader of just about all his novels, this is the most disappointing of all. However, as a reader of just about all his novels, he still got my $$$!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Inaccuracies in the text.
Review: Michael Crichton's book contains two errors. On page 42 in the large print edition it is stated: "We entered a vein, so the red cells are not oxygenated." The pulmonary veins contain oxygenated blood. Not all veins are low in oxygen. Also, on the same page it is written: "We're coming to the right atrium, and we should see the mitral valve." Correction: The mitral valve is located between the Left Atrium and the Left Ventricle.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Outstanding and SPOOKY
Review: I read at least a book a week, so it takes a bit to surprise me anymore....This was all I'd hoped it would be--and likely an amazing insight into some scientific fields that don't get as much media time as they should. A truly scary scenario, backed up with great characters, plotline, and twists. A VERY enjoyable read.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Just Plain awful and stupid
Review: If this book had any other author's name on it, it never would have been published. This was so terrible I found myself cringing over certain parts. None of the characters were believable. The plot was just plain stupid and unbelievable. Don't waste your money on this best seller.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Nonsensical nanotechnoligical nightmare
Review: Michael Crichton endeavoring to create another techno thriller like his superlative Jurassic Park, comes up woefully short with his latest offering, the preposterous Prey.

The premise behind the book is nanotechnology, the building of manmade machinery of incredibly small size.

Jack Forman a bright fortyish unemployed computer software designer with a biology background is acting as a house husband to his three children. His wife Julia, who also has a computer background, is a V.P. of Xymos. Xymos is a company involved in nanotechnology whose major project is being funded by the Department of Defense. They are developing a super miniature undetectable surveillance camera which can be suspended in the air much like dust, in a remote facility in the Nevada desert.

Xymos has been having developmental problems and the D.O.D is threatening to stop the flow of money. In addition Julia Forman has been acting very bizzarely and neglecting her family.

A desperate phone called is placed to Jack Forman by Xymos to help them correct their problems as a paid consultant. He is flown out to the Nevada laboratory where he learns that a swarm of these mini cameras has escaped the facility. They have been created using both biological and computer technology originally created by Forman. Shockingly, the swarm is reproducing and evolving at a rapid pace and showing characteristics of living entities. This evolution is being nurtured by the killing and consumption of the local animal population with the Xymos technicians as their apparent next targets.

This story is too far fetched to be at all plausible. I'd have to however give Crichton high marks on his imagination, intelligence and the exhaustive research he obviously put in.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best since Jurassic Park
Review: What else can you say to a book like this but, wow. I had so much fun reading it that I finished it in record time and handed it off to my wife. A fun, flippant but disturbing look at nanotechnology and the ramifications of using others theories, as Ian Malcom said, "Riding on the shoulders of geniuses."

The hero is the "stay at home" dad with a good sense of humor. You have to wonder if Mr. Crichton has performed this duty himself as it was very well played out and true to form. There is very little time for character buildup, but who needs it when the events are so well put together and new catastrophes unfold on every 10 pages.

Crichton has not performed this type of "can't put down" writing since Jurassic Park. Although the reader figures out the ending way before everyone in the book does, it only adds to your wanting to find out when and how the characters will figure it out for themselves. The end is another great roller coaster ride from a master. Sit back, buckle up and enjoy the ride!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Prey
Review: Michael Crichton's book was excellent. The scientific jargon lost me a couple of times. Overall the book was exciting, I couldn't put it down! The way Mr. Crichton has a habit of showing mankind of it's giant leaps in technology, but major mess ups figuring out the cons of such technology, is uncanny. Keep up the great work Mr. Crichton!


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