State of Fear

by Michael Crichton
State of Fear
published
2004 by Harpercollins
edit

binding
Hardcover

isbn
0739448153   (isbn13: 9780739448151)





Sign in to Goodreads to see your friends' reviews of this book.







discuss this book

There are no discussion topics on this book yet. Be the first to start one »

groups with this book

The Fleet
Sassy Ladies Book Club
GNOChicago




friend reviews (0)

To see what your friends thought of this book, please sign up.



lists with this book




other reviews (showing 1-20 of 4809)



Estrina
bookshelves: crichtons, favourites
Read in March, 2006
I bet everyone, I mean, everyone who has been to school and studied science knows what global warming is and perhaps it's the hot enviromental issue for the past a few decades. There are a number of campaigns to overcome this threat, to save the earth. But this book justifies that no such threat exists or at least it will not threaten the earth for a few hundred years. Questions were raised and answered with proof and statistical data. Convincing indeed. The twist started when this guy called Ni...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  add a comment

Mike
03/23/08

bookshelves: fiction, science
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: Anyone who likes a great story
Do you enjoy seeing pompous, self-righteous jerks get their rightful comeuppance? Then you will like this book. Dr Crichton delivers his usual competent tour through a scientific realm, mixing a decent amount of action and suspense with actual facts. Global warming zealots are the target here and he hits the bull’s eye, judging from the reaction about this book. The book reads exceptionally fast for all the science and background explanation necessary. For the average person with a little com...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  add a comment

Anthony
Anthony rated it: 3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars3 of 5 stars
06/27/08

bookshelves: fantasy, politics-political-thought, science-medicine
Read in June, 2008
recommended to Anthony by: Dennis
recommends it for: Adults who have uncertanties in the debate on man-made global warming
Michael Crichton’s State of Fear is a novel that presents a bit of a reviewers dichotomy for me. It is based largely on the often radical, always irrational, religion of environmentalism and it’s deleterious impact on society. A religion which holds man-made global warming as original sin, celebrities like Sean Penn, Leonardo DiCaprio, and Cameron Diaz as prophets, Carbon Credits and “Cap and Trade” as tithes and indulgences, and Al Gore as savior. The positions and clichéd hyperbole...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Debi
08/27/08

bookshelves: garbage
Read in August, 2008
recommends it for: my worst enemy
Truly one of the worst books I have ever read. This book started with a great deal of promise. A series of vivid occurrences of espionage linked to scientific pursuits in exotic locales. Eco-terrorism, shady business dealings and a cast of potentially interesting characters. And then...it all self-destructed into a ludicrous mess that was not only idiotic in its pacing and plot contrivances but preachy and annoying, with characters of such brutish ignorance being lectured by such emotionally-voi...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Sonny
04/30/08

Read in April, 2008
I already totally didn't believe in global warming, because I was following the scientific debate, and the case for it was so lost by 2007 that the IPCC didn't even bother to try to hide that their report summaries are written by UN bureaucrats and approved by UN diplomats without any scientific input or review, like they tried to hide it back in '95. In other words, as of 2008, only the sort of morons who don't know that politicians lie, and don't know or don't care that all their speeches and ...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

tENTATIVELY, a cONVENIENCE
bookshelves: sf
This is propaganda written by an ultra-rich person. Utterly despicable. I just thought Crichton was mediocre until I read this. Now I think he's insidious. There're 2 basic thrusts: Global Warming is a myth & ecology activists are phenomenally stupid. I don't actually have much of an opinion about global warming one way or the other so I don't hate this novel so much b/c it's a threat to mass consciousness there. I hate it b/c it's so repulsively propagandistic (w/o any self-acknowledg...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  1 comments

Peter
bookshelves: 2007, fiction, science-fiction
Read in February, 2007
As with every Michael Crichton book I have ever read, I have very mixed feelings about this book. As always, Crichton has researched his subject very thoroughly which means that his thoughts and criticisms that permeate this book cannot be dismissed as purely “popular science.” In fact, I think that he can adequately be called a “futurist” - someone who looks at the current state of science - especially cutting edge research - and extrapolates the potential social, political, and scien...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

George
05/18/08

bookshelves: burn
Read in April, 2008
recommends it for: nobody
I disliked this book intensely. Right from the beginning it was critical of enviornmental subjects such as global warming. I was involved with through such studies in the 1990s and into the new century, and many of his opinions were ill-founded: although I recognized that the problems he spoke of exist, they are hardly dominant in any of the enviromental fields.He claimed to be a defender of the scientific method regarding an approach to the crises apparent in the world, yet there were obvious g...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Punk
06/20/07

Read in August, 2006
Fiction. Is global warming real? Peter Evans always thought so, but now, on the trail of a radical environmental group, he's beginning to question his long-held assumptions. This is, in fact, fiction, and veers wildly between your basic action/suspense novel and an infodumpalicious anti-global warming manifesto. It's an awkward mix of statistics and action, with the story literally alternating between being shot at and sitting down and listening to reasons why global warming is a myth.

Crich...more
Like this review?   yes  
  4 comments

Rachel
08/01/07

Read in July, 2007
recommends it for: those who do or don't believe in statistics
This book was intriguing to me. It is not what I would consider my normal genre, but the student I tutored last year did a report on Michael Crichton and this book was in a lot of the research we did. I had no idea Michael Chrichton was so multi-talented.
Anyway, my husband had listened to this book on CD while driving, and really enjoyed it, so I picked it off the shelf. Once I started reading, I had trouble stopping for food, drink, bathroom breaks, or even sleep. (This is the reason I ...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  add a comment

Kellie
09/11/08

bookshelves: 2006-reads, mystery-thrillers
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Ellie
05/10/07

Read in January, 2005
Unfortunately, Crichton is too convincing in his anti-global warming propaganda piece. The story is great, sure, but this book is just that – a very thinly veiled piece of propaganda for the right wing oil industries and politicians who want us to believe that there’s no such thing as global warming. And he is very, very convincing. My mother says she read that he’s actually receiving kickbacks from oil companies. I can’t even counter the arguments, so I’ll have to read more about it. ...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Ryan
05/31/08

bookshelves: fiction
Read in March, 2008
recommends it for: Readers of thrillers and science writing
A courageous piece of writing from an author who has done his homework and who had every reason NOT to write this book but chose to do so anyway. Despite the fact that the book is fictional, the real studies sited and real data collected will make any reader want to take a closer look at the global warming debate. (The references in the back of the book are at least as comprehensive as most non-fiction books.)

Given his chosen topics of writing it may seem strange but Michael Crichton is not ...more
Like this review?   yes  
  2 comments

Debbie
03/20/08

Read in June, 2006
I'm sad to say I didn't care for the writing in this book. It came across as a soapbox. The reason I'm sad to say that is because I, as a geologist, agree with Crichton that the evidence supporting humans as the driving factor in global warming isn't sufficiently supported by the available science. However, the book confuses the issue by rolling in debate about wether or not global warming (for whatever reason) is even happening, a distinction I've found many people don't understand. I doubt...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  1 comments

Jack
04/03/07

bookshelves: modernfiction, nytbestseller
Read in June, 2006
recommends it for: People who have read Crichton and enjoy him.
OK, so, controversy concerning global warming aside, this is a pretty solid effort from Crichton. Particularly more engrossing than Timeline although probably not as believable as Prey. His readers seem to understand and expect that he will take rather liberal license with stretching the realm of scientific possibility in his stories, but the point is his skeptic characters' sure seem to believe i...more
Like this review?   yes   (2 people liked it)
  add a comment

Ann
11/08/07

bookshelves: makes-you-think
Holy crap. First of all, a good, solid Crichton novel. Second, you will never think about global warming or science in general the same way again... I don't know how much of the information about global warming presented in the book is true, but it sure does make you wonder about a lot of things. What the book is really about is the politicization of science and the manipulation (even if unintentional) of scientific information. And all of this is presented in the form of an exciting, well-...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  2 comments

Fran
06/18/08

Read in May, 2008
recommended to Fran by: my brother-in-law of all people
recommends it for: my worst enemy
WHAT A DISAPPOINTMENT!!!! I have read lots of Crichton through the years but his take on global warming is absolutely distressing. Not only is the book even less believable than cloned dinosaurs, his pseudo- scientific "how to lie with statistics" approach does a grave disservice to anyone who is confused about global climate change. I used to teach Earth Science and I told my students that Yes, the verdict was still out on some aspects of global warming. But that by the time we kno...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment

Shannon
Read in January, 2008
I really enjoyed this book, despite being a tree-hugger and one of the main themes of the book being that it questioned the entire concept of global warming. It was a very compelling page-turner, and I think Crichton does an excellent job of conveying the message not that global warming is necessarily false or that there aren't things we could all be doing differently in our lives, but that every news headline (and every study too) should be taken with a grain of salt and the data behind it sho...more
Like this review?   yes   (1 person liked it)
  add a comment

Holly
09/16/08

Read in September, 2008
I would have enjoyed this book so much more if I wouldn't have had to wade through so much crap to enjjoy the meat. This book was on my 9th grader's summer reading list and it definately was not appropriate for her. I am going to complain to the list compiler. Sure it had a lot of interesting scientific information but... the language was very offensive and there were a couple of scenes that should have been left out.

My question for Michael Crichton (and so many other authors for that matte...more
Like this review?   yes  
  1 comments

Mike
08/18/08

Read in August, 2008
I really liked this book at first and enjoyed the middle portion of it as well; even the final climatic battle of "good versus evil" was a decent read. The book in its entirety discusses many detailed perspectives on "global warming" and socially induced fear mechanisms within society. Additionally, there were some sections in the middle that were quite riveting. However, near the end of the book, the story itself becomes a sort of train wreck as the author is unable to ti...more
Like this review?   yes  
  add a comment


« previous 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 240 241





book data (includes all editions)

avg rating (all editions): 3.45 (4003 ratings)
avg rating (this edition): 3.47 (242 ratings)
number of reviews: 530