The Andromeda Strain
by Michael Crichton
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Read in October, 2007
recommends it for:
Science Fiction fans
Book Review
The Andromeda Strain, by Michael Crichton is a wonderfully written book. Mr. Creighton is also the writer of one of the best science fiction books ever. He was the genius behind Jurassic Park. The story is about a government satellite that was engineered for biological weapons that has run off course and landed in a small town in Arizona, surprisingly everyone except an old man have died including the investigators. The government then assembles a team called Project Wildfire to in...more
The Andromeda Strain, by Michael Crichton is a wonderfully written book. Mr. Creighton is also the writer of one of the best science fiction books ever. He was the genius behind Jurassic Park. The story is about a government satellite that was engineered for biological weapons that has run off course and landed in a small town in Arizona, surprisingly everyone except an old man have died including the investigators. The government then assembles a team called Project Wildfire to in...more
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Read in May, 2008
recommended to Zhiming by:
my teacherrecommends it for: EVERYONE
This book, “The Andromeda Strain” is the first book by the author Michael Crichton, who also wrote the book Jurassic Park. The Andromeda Strain is about 4 of the top scientists work on a deadly virus that killed a whole town of people in as little as 5 seconds. It has two effects, one of the effects is it enters the human body, then it goes through the whole entire human body and blood vessels in 3.5 seconds clotting all the blood. The second effect is it goes to the brain of the human and m...more
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Read in June, 2008
so i totally picked this up because i watched the made-for-t.v. movie on a&e (hellooo benjamin bratt!), and while the book is typical crichton, entertaining but not a-mazing, it's a good, quick read, and makes for a good palette-cleanser in between denser works. aka, i've had moby dick in my purse for a week now and it's daunting, so i read this. i checked this out from the library last night; the book was published in in the early 70's, i believe, and apparently that's when the library boug...more
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bookshelves:
fiction
Read in March, 2008
Andromeda Strain addresses a "worst case" scenario, where an unknown bacteria has the potential to wreak havoc on society, and a secret government agency has to deal with it before it gets completely loose.
The construction of the events and the execution feels very real - rather than an elite team of geniuses who use super spy powers to do whatever they want, you get a feel for the bureaucracy created by a government organization made to address an unknown threat, and the hodge-pod...more
The construction of the events and the execution feels very real - rather than an elite team of geniuses who use super spy powers to do whatever they want, you get a feel for the bureaucracy created by a government organization made to address an unknown threat, and the hodge-pod...more
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bookshelves:
mooched,
own-it,
thrillers
Has a copy to sell/swap
—
Read in June, 2008
I can’t decide if this book hasn’t stood the test of time terribly well or would have been bad even if I’d read it when it was released 40 years ago. Either way it’s certainly not up to Crichton’s usual standards. It shares some characteristics of his later books in that the story speeds along without a lot of depth but it has none of the subtlety or writing skill of his later works. There is a clear awkwardness when he switches from the narrative to the scientific/medical sections (it...more
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When a satellite, that has been sent into orbit to collect organisms that will be studied for signs of life, returns to Earth, its contents escape and, within a matter of minutes, kill all but two of the inhabitants of a small town in Arizona. The Wildfire Team, a collection of scientists that are brought together on a moment's notice, must try to identify what this bacterial strain is and how to stop it before it spreads across the nation and, eventually, the globe, killing everyone and everyth...more
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bookshelves:
2007,
novel,
thriller
Read in August, 2007
recommends it for:
Scientists
This book is all about the tension, not the payoff.
As with most entertainment, this book pulls you in by asking some questions. "What is it?" "How does it work?" "What happened?" While those questions are still being asked, this book is a fairly thrilling read.
If you don't like books that get too technical about things, though, this isn't the book for you. It's full of pages from government documents, computer readouts, and the like. That only helps ...more
As with most entertainment, this book pulls you in by asking some questions. "What is it?" "How does it work?" "What happened?" While those questions are still being asked, this book is a fairly thrilling read.
If you don't like books that get too technical about things, though, this isn't the book for you. It's full of pages from government documents, computer readouts, and the like. That only helps ...more
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Read in June, 2008
recommended to Steve by:
Mrs. Henryrecommends it for: Anyone who likes sci-fi
The Andromeda Strain
By Michael Crichton
Review by Steve Fermin
I thought that this was a good book. The only problem with it is that is was dull at some points, especially the extremely dull ending, most books end in action but the last few chapters were especially dull. Some characters I feel shouldn’t have been in the plot. They just ruined the whole story even after all the suspense built up.
The character I thought shouldn’t have been included in the book is Burton. He barely...more
By Michael Crichton
Review by Steve Fermin
I thought that this was a good book. The only problem with it is that is was dull at some points, especially the extremely dull ending, most books end in action but the last few chapters were especially dull. Some characters I feel shouldn’t have been in the plot. They just ruined the whole story even after all the suspense built up.
The character I thought shouldn’t have been included in the book is Burton. He barely...more
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bookshelves:
2008,
science-fiction---fact
Read in January, 2008
This book must have been the inspiration for those two episodes of The X-Files, where they have the ear bug thing that makes people go insane and the one episode with the volcano life form; with a little bit of the little green bug that eats people episode thrown in for a mix.
Within this story, we find a few things that are interesting, and a lot of things that Michael Crichton indicates may be important later on; and then aren't. I...more
Within this story, we find a few things that are interesting, and a lot of things that Michael Crichton indicates may be important later on; and then aren't. I...more
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Read in November, 2007
recommends it for:
people interested in biology
This book is about a group of specially selected biologists that are working together to find out more about an organism that wiped out an entire town. They discover more and more things like the organism cannot spread if the host is dead, the organism clogs every artery within the body and causes the blood to go in a solid state. They are trying to find out how to survive against this organism that is in the air. Their motivation: one man and one infant that survived the contagious organism fro...more
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I think I read this when I was in junior high at my Dad's recommendation. I really liked it and ended up being a fan of Michael Crichton's books for a while. I've probably read most of them. I have to say though, for some reason, this is still my favorite by him. I started feeling like every book he was writing was written so it could be made into a movie. It was almost as if he was constructing shocking, suspenseful action scenes that would make a movie exciting while keeping dialog simpli...more
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Read in January, 2004
recommends it for:
هراس
همیشه تصور بر این است که موجودات فرازمینی؛ موجوداتی عجیب و غریب با ظاهری هیولاگونه و متفاوت و با فضاپیماهایی فوق پیشرفته هستند. ولی آقای کرایتون یک فرضیه ای را مطرح می کند که البته ممکن است آنچنان هم دور از واقعیت نباشد؛ فرضیه داستان کتاب درباره هجوم موجودات فرازمینی به سیاره...more
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This is a good read if you come at it like this. First it was the first of its type and has been done very well by other writers since. Second consider that this is the first book ever written by Michael Crichton, who is a great writer, but this is a first book and I think therefor short. plus it was written in a time when fiction books were short. My guess is that if he were to re-write it, that it would be longer today. But it is a very readable book and very well done is somewhat short. And ...more
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bookshelves:
science-fiction
Read in June, 2008
Thoroughly enjoyed re-reading this classic science fiction novel by Michael Crichton. And it was something I could knock out in a couple of hours, even with lots of scientific jargon to slog through. Stretching vocabulary is always a good thing!
I decided to re-read The Andromeda Strain because of the A&E mini-series aired a couple of weeks ago. I think the screenwriters did an excellent job of being faithful to the book but also updating the science and technology 40+ years. ...more
I decided to re-read The Andromeda Strain because of the A&E mini-series aired a couple of weeks ago. I think the screenwriters did an excellent job of being faithful to the book but also updating the science and technology 40+ years. ...more
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Read in January, 1995
recommends it for:
Crichton fans, Medical Fiction fans, Mystery fans
All I'm going to say about Crichton is that he has a knack for what I call the "miracle ending". In one summer I read Congo, Jurassic Park, The Andromeda Strain, Terminal Man, The Great Train Robbery and Sphere. I felt the same about each of them when I finished each.
He's a very good writer with captivating storylines, dead on science, compelling plot and in depth characters, but...I feel like he gets tired of writing the same story or can't properly tie things together at the en...more
He's a very good writer with captivating storylines, dead on science, compelling plot and in depth characters, but...I feel like he gets tired of writing the same story or can't properly tie things together at the en...more
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It burned out at the end. The whole story seemed like it was for nothing once you find out what happens at the very end. It was a good read and interesting. I found the underground facility to be very unique and well thought up. The wierdest thing was the flash room. The scientists had to stand there and ge flashed, it supposedly killed all the bacteria on th surface of your skin and pretty much burned off your body hair. I can't remember if you could smell the singed hair? I do know that burnt ...more
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I loved this book, tho it was a little short so i read it in maybe a couple of hours. Very intriguing. I love the what-if's and the scientists rushing to try to find the cause and solution. The payoff isn't as good as I would have hoped for, but the book seems more geared to the what-if's and the panic and making you think about frighteneing possibilities and skips the usual hero scenario that shows off man's ingenuity and intelligence that could stave off a potential global catastrophe. Over...more
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Read in May, 2008
I wish we could give half stars because I would have given this 2 1/2. The beginning of the book was so engaging. I became completely engrossed in the story and couldn't put the book down. Then the end of the book came. It felt to me like it was half a book. There was so much tension built up in the beginning. Similarly, I felt the author foreshadowed so much to come and then it never came to fruition. I just don't feel like the author completed the story and took as much care with the ending as...more
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I recently watched the A&E adaptation, which made me curious to go back and read this again. I'd forgotten it was published so long ago (1969) and was his first novel; it was especially funny to read his description of how a computer can now have the capability to host up to about 20 simultaneous users, taking adavnatge of the computer's "down time" as it waits for a human to input a task for it to accomplish. Even so, it stands up fairly well over time and doesn't feel too dated
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Read in May, 2008
Supposedly this is a true story? It moved along at a good pace and provided interesting moments, but had too much technical jargon for me, and I have a very weak stomach for anything having to do with bacteria or medical terms so at times I felt quite sick. That's not the fault of the author though, just my own personal enjoyment of the story - I'd recommend it to medical students or people interested in these types of things, and will in future stick to reading my fairy tales. ;-)
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