The Andromeda Strain
discussion
Which was Cricton's best book? apart from the andromeda strain

" MC must have really disliked Walt Disney. "
LOL
Westworld, Jurassic Park(x2), Timeline..good pick up!
As for 'Lost World'..what's wrong with Conan Doyle?
So many: Prey, Timeline, Congo,and State of Fear, are my top faves. It was too hard to pick just one.You will like reading M.C. although sometimes when he lands the story you will say Huh?



L.A. Kragie
author of Vampire Chimeras


Level 7 by Mordecai Roshwald to name one. A cold war inspired bit of paranoia about the last survivors of the human race being killed by their own technology post worldwide armageddon type warfare. Thousands of feet under ground, in a top to bottom layered environment with each deeper level being more secure and self contained.
The United States missions to the Moon for another. The are indelible images in the brains of those of us who watched as the first Lunar astronauts upon their return were hermetically sealed in to an Airstream trailer.(well it looked like my great aunt's Airstream) This was to protect the Earth from any possible contamination brought back from the moon. Or from a low/no gravity environment that might have altered an earth based bacteria or virus such that it would spread uncontrollably.
Writers Bono and Gatland (Frontiers of Space among others) in the same year as AS was published in a non-fiction wrote of the research in to using low gravity, altered accelaration(modified G-forces), and other physical methods enhanced by space travel to alter biological life at the microscopic level. Growth solution technology enhanced or degraded by centrifuge activity was a decade or more old technology by the 1960's. Microbiologists had been exploiting this since easily the 1930's.
Further Crichton's Alma mater Harvard, and some even brighter folks a few blocks away on the banks of the Charles River at M.I.T. had designed and been chief contractors for the new C.D.C. facilities in Atlanta. Containment facilities in and around Harvard Medical School were well known within Michael Crichton's professional circles. Public concern was escalating by the early 1960's regarding the accidental release of biological (or chemical) agents in a metro area as a result of academic research. Crichton was 'just' reading the newspapers and new magazines of the era. At least to grasp the tone of the paranoia.
What is interesting is Crichton's awareness of the psychological studies that were not really public at all at the time he wrote the Andromeda Strain that had been incorporated into US Air Force Command doctrine for Strategic Air Command. Specifically the concern's about the 'if' question of an officer using 'nukes'. Much of this still has not fully emerged, but much more with the end of the Cold War than was available in the 1960's. Perhaps one of his colleagues at Harvard anonymously made documents available to Crichton to address the increasing paranoia about he Military Industrial Complex???
There are a bunch of other fiction and non-fiction sources that Crichton drew on, but his was a good story that was well told. I've always felt that was Crichton's biggest talent in the fictional realm, storytelling.


Great stuff. I will have to look into these two (well, the one which is fiction, in any case) and compare them to what Crichton did. Thx for writing all that out, CD.


Timeline... another well researched novel. Good work.

It's been a really long time since I read The Great Train Robbery, and I may go dig it out of my shelves and give it a second look after reading the comments here.




The Terminal Man was OK.



This is a keen observation. It may even be true. Obviously, except for 'Great Train Robbery' you're kinda correct: 'Andromeda Strain', 'Terminal Man', and many of his other projects all deal with microscopic threats. Even 'Jurassic' has that element. But 'Looker' did not; 'Westworld' did not; nor did 'Runaway'. I'm not familiar with enough of his later projects to say more.
Anyway I really liked what you pointed out.


When reading the opening question, Great Train Robbery was the only book that came to mind, for the reasons Feliks wrote. Recently reread Case of Need and felt it had aged well, also.

"Travels", a memoir published well before "Jurassic Park."
I think it is Crichton's absolute best work.

To me prey and state of fear are the most intriguing. Both are haunting on different levels and enter a world where control is lost.

What else? Some of them take corporate money to produce deliberately obfuscating psueudo-reports for the sake of discrediting useful findings from good scientists which could help save lives (smoking and climate control are two areas like these).
And now there's this new trend of some researchers so hungry for their (15 minutes of) fame that they're deliberately falsifying 'amazing breakthoughs'.
I'm sick of scientists. You can see what huge damage a couple of scumbags (Bill Gates, Steve Jobs) have done to our planet just because they wanted to 'tinker with stuff'.

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2. Prey (just a superb story that I can just keep rereading)
3. Jurassic Park
4. Disclosure or Next
In that order.