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Prey

Prey

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Master Formula
Review: Chrichton is my favorite author. I love the techno-thriller that he has perfected over the years with his master formula. He intermingles science with suspense to create oustounding novels. Prey may not be his best, but it sure is an awesome novel. I just love those action sci-fi novels. My favorite is Sphere, but Prey is still a great novel. Keep up the good work Chrichton!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: What you can't see can kill you
Review: Prey is a good read. It's fast, it's entertaining, it's even educational a little. I enjoyed reading it. It is a sold Crichton book, and a good beach or plane read.
The thing is ... it's not original enough to earn more than 3 stars. Crichton, while not being a great novelist (let's face it, his characters are not very well developed, they are just there, so the plot can move), nearly allways in the past was original. Before Crichton we haven't read about deadly viruses, nearly sentient gorillas (not counting "Planet of the Apes" or several comic-book characters), or dinosaurs in the modern world.
But deadly nanomachines ... well, we even had Mulder and Scully dealing with the problem in one of original X-files novels ("Antibodies"). The fact that the nanotechnology is not a novel idea in books is not, of course, the authors fault, but it makes the scientific aspect of the novel (which allways was one of Crichtons strong points) less interesting.
Also, I found the first part of the novel a bit too long. This is the part of the novel, which shows the life of the mysterious occurances, and the main character wondering about what's going on, etc. It is well written. But let's face it - you've read the back cover, so you allready know the reason behind all this.
That's the problem with many of todays novels, or maybe not novels, but books. Having to sell them, the publishers put too much information on the cover, and sometimes it spoils the experience of reading. I think that when it comes to Crichton or King, the publishers can wet our interest not by giving away plot points, but by surrounding the book in mystery - like the 5th Harry Potter book. If I've approached this book without any information about what i'll find inside, I would've definetly enjoyed it more.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: prey is o.k.
Review: Michael Crichton is a great writer.
Prey grabbed me in the first chapter.
But by the end I was just glad it was over.
I read this book in a single day.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: I Smell a Pattern Forming...
Review: Hmmm. Let's see here, I see a couple of things that sound a little familiar. I see a high tech experiment, run by a crack team of scientists who don't realize the danger they're putting the world into with said experiment. I also see an outsider who comes into said experiment, an outsider who instantly realizes the inherent hazards of what is going on. Alright, then I see that the experiment goes horribly awry! The terror of it all! Those stupid scientists thought that they could make a profit off of this futuristic technology, when they were putting the fate of the world in jeapordy! Luckily, the Outsider manages to save us all, and yet we are left with a sobering conclusion: Will our own hubris be the end of us all?! Man, Prey had it all, and yet i'm certain i've read it somewhere before. Oh, right, I read it in Jurassic Park. And The Andromeda Strain. And Timeline. Crichton is guilty of plagarism, but I don't think it counts because he's ripping off his own work. Again. Prey is a decent enough way to kill an afternoon, (it's mercifully short) but I wouldn't expect too much unless this is your first from Crichton. Otherwise, it's just another one of his standard Sci-Thriller Mad-libs, this time with Nanobots instead of dinosaurs.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Better Movie Than Novel
Review: This novel was my first exposure to Michael Crichton. Though I had seen several of the movies based on his books, I had never read him before. The book was an extremely easy read; I devoured it in one day. I liked the conversational style of his writing and the vulnerability he portrayed in his Everyman hero, Jack Forman. The pacing was well-done and the urgency of the situation kept me engrossed. However, parts of the story seemed awkward and his writing seemed sloppy in places. The story was told in first person, but Jack gave information that he couldn't have known (since he wasn't in the room, etc. etc.). It seemed like Crichton was writing this one for a movie, since most of the flaws in the writing would not have mattered in the staging of a film. I thought this was an enjoyable thrill ride, but not a particularly impressive or creative piece of popular fiction.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Truth is stranger than fiction
Review: Yet again Michael Crichton crafts a tale so compelling that you kow it could simply just happen. In a world dominated by technology it is only a matter of time before some bright spark scientist starts looking at Crichton's novels as a blueprint for world destruction.

In Prey he tackles the subject of nanoparticles and also computer intelligence with horrifying results. A simple computer program that helps systems problem solve is used to devastating effect when combined with swarms of nanoparticles allowing them to evolve independently of their creators, once released into the wild they become the hunter and their creators their prey.

Not the easiest of books to read as it contains plenty of technical knowledge but it is written with such conviction and so finely crafted that you can forgive him his forays into the "technical stuff" and just sit back and enjoy a thoroughly enjoyable ride. Dealing with human relationships almost as much as the horrifying results of man's arrogance it is a real page turner and you will not be able to put it down, not even long wnough to wonder if that itch is really an itch or part of the swarm invading you.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Great idea, but...
Review: I picked up this book with great expectation. Unfortunately, while the idea was great, I did not find the book to be as meticulously written as several other Chrichton's novels. Worse yet, Chrichton let his imagination wandered too far that a story that could have been highly believable turns into another undistinguished, overly imaginative science fiction tale. I found the idea of nanobots becoming renegades and starting to reproduce in the wild possible, if not plausible, in the next decade or so. However, the idea of them taking over human bodies was laughable. It reminded me of a 1980s movie called "The Hidden" in which an eel-like alien entered human bodies and took control of them. Actually, Julia's mouth-to-mouth introduction of the swarms to David was exactly the same process the alien in "The Hidden" used to migrate from body to body.

Furthermore, there are a few things that I simply found puzzling at the least. 1) Why was Jack brought in? The official (and false) reason was to fix the program. We learned later that it was not true. Yet, nobody (including Jack himself) offered any explanation. Was Jack brought in as a consultant simply because there was no other way to introduce him to the scene? 2) When Jack first saw the swarms formed Ricky's shape outside the factory, he immediately realized that it was the same shape with the one he had seen in Julia's car. Yet he did not ask any question; He did not even wonder about it. 3) The swarms invaded and took over Julia, Ricky, Vince, and Bobby but not the others. No explanation was offered. 4) Crichton made the point of nanobots being a confluence of biotechnology, nanotechnology, and software engineering. Yet, with the exception of Mae, everyone had background in Computer Science. How come there was no expert in the other two fields?

There are many other things that were not satisfactorily explained in the book. As usual, Crichton wrote something of an epilogue, but it did not offer much in the way of explanation. In the past, I had immensely enjoyed reading Chricton's books. This one simply failed to match those earlier creations.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Nanotechnology
Review: Before I read this novel by Mr Michael Crichton I had never heard of the word nanotechnology and much less nanorobots. It is a very exciting book and yes this is not very different from the other Crichton books like Jurassic Park or Timeline and the Andromeda Strain, it still a book about science gone wrong, but so what, as long as it's exciting and not boring he should keep writing books like this. Michael Crichton cand do no wrong, I have read all of his books and all of them are great.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Like Cheese Curls
Review: ...Tasty, but not particularly filling. As one reviewer noted, this has the unmistakeable feel of a movie treatment. I had thought that the novels that movies were based upon were supposed to be richer in detail, full of character development and those characters' interior worlds. Crichton glosses from one scene to the next, introducing just enough detail to keep the plot afloat for the next action sequence.

No, I wasn't expecting Shakespeare, and yes, Crichton does bring up some interesting ideas about the dangers of nanotechnology and biotechnology. (Not worthy of a three-page bibliography, usually reserved for scholarly works, but interesting nevertheless.) Still, this book seemed rather less imaginative than anything by Philip K. Dick, and I found myself not particularly caring about whether the wife would live, or whether the kids were OK, or the end of the world, or anything like that. The characters were two-dimensional, hurried, barely even sketched.

Great idea, haphazard execution. Perhaps Mr. Crichton's editors are too much in awe of the author-as-moneymaker to offer him constructive advice on the basics of creative writing, but I'm sure there are good community college programs toward that end if he's interested.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Good Stuff
Review: What a cool idea! Nanometer-sized particles that can learn and mimick living things. The spookiness of this out-of-control technology will really keep your attention in this book. Very imaginitive and intelligent!


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