Tuesday, April 10, 2012
Micro: A Novel
Product Descriptionp/ppiIn Jurassic Park, he created a terrifying new world. Now, in Micro, Michael Crichton reveals a universe too small to see and too dangerous to ignore./i/ppIn a locked Honolulu office building, three men are found dead with no sign of struggle except for the ultrafine, razor-sharp cuts covering their bodies. The only clue left behind is a tiny bladed robot, nearly invisible to the human eye./ppIn the lush forests of Oahu, groundbreaking technology has ushered in a revolutionary era of biological prospecting. Trillions of microorganisms, tens of thousands of bacteria species, are being discovered; they are feeding a search for priceless drugs and applications on a scale beyond anything previously imagined./ppIn Cambridge, Massachusetts, seven graduate students at the forefront of their fields are recruited by a pioneering microbiology start-up. Nanigen MicroTechnologies dispatches the group to a mysterious lab in Hawaii, where they are promised access to tools that will open a whole new scientific frontier./ppBut once in the Oahu rain forest, the scientists are thrust into a hostile wilderness that reveals profound and surprising dangers at every turn. Armed only with their knowledge of the natural world, they find themselves prey to a technology of radical and unbridled power. To survive, they must harness the inherent forces of nature itself./ppAn instant classic, Micro pits nature against technology in vintage Crichton fashion. Completed by visionary science writer Richard Preston, this boundary-pushing thriller melds scientific fact with pulse-pounding fiction to create yet another masterpiece of sophisticated, cutting-edge entertainment./pp/pAmazon.com Reviewp/pbr / strong class="h1" Amazon Exclusive: ?€emMicro/em is Anything But Small?€ by James Rollins /strong br / pstrong An avid spelunker and scuba enthusiast, James Rollins holds a doctorate in veterinary medicine and is the author of the emNew York Times/em best-selling Sigma Force series, the most recent of which is emThe Devil Colony/em. /strong/p span class="h1"strong /strong/spanimg height="221" src=" http://g-ecx.images-amazon.com/images/G/01/books/harper/images/Rollins_Web._V165296938_.jpg" style="float: right;" width="189" / pFirst I have to admit, Michael Crichton is why I write. In fact, if not for his books, I?€d probably still be a practicing veterinarian in Northern California, dealing with flea allergies, ear infections, and all manner of medical maladies. It was Crichton?€s stories of wild adventures, his explorations into the strange frontiers of science, and his truly ripped-from-the-headlines plotting that inspired me to set down my own scalpel and stethoscope and pick up pen and paper./p pBut his influence went beyond mere heady inspiration. His books also served as a tutorial into the practicalities of storytelling. When I tackled my first novel (a deep-earth adventure titled emSubterranean/em), I continually kept a copy of emJurassic Park/em on the shelf above my desk. That book became my roadmap on how to build a story?€s structure: who dies first and when, at what point do we see the first dinosaur, how do you fold science into a novel without stagnating the flow? That old copy of emJurassic Park/em remains dog-eared and heavily highlighted, and it still holds a cherished place on my bookshelf./p pSo I dove into Crichton?€s latest novel, emMicro/em, with some trepidation, fearing how a collaborative effort might tarnish his great body of work. Now, to be fair, I?€d also read Richard Preston?€s nonfiction masterpiece of scientific horror and intrigue, emThe Hot Zone/em. That book was as brilliant as it was terrifying. But still I wondered, could Preston take Crichton?€s story and truly do it justice?/p pIn a word: emYES/em./p pIn two words, emHELL YES./em/p pemMicro/em is pure Crichton. Dare I say, emvintage/em Crichton, harkening back to the scientific intrigue of emAndromeda Strain/em, to the exploration of the natural world covered in emCongo/em, and to the adventure and thrills of emThe Lost World/em. As only Crichton can, he has taken a scientific concept as wild as the one he tackled in emTimeline/em and exceeded in making it chillingly real. It took a clever quirk of genetics and cloning to give rise to the dinosaurs in emJurassic Park/em. Likewise, a twist of science in Micro calls forth a new horror out of the natural world?€”but not just one line of threat. In this book, the entire biosphere becomes a vast and deadly playground. Its depiction is both darkly beautiful and stunningly dreadful. It is a terrain as foreign as any hostile planet, yet as close as our own backyard. To tell more would ruin a great adventure that will have you looking out your window with new eyes./p pSimilarly, this lethal and toxic terrain must be traversed by a band of gutsy heroes. But in typical Crichton style, these are not elite commandos or a highly trained black ops team. They?€re simply a group of graduate students?€”each uniquely talented and flawed?€”gathered from various scientific disciplines: entomology, toxicology, botany, biochemistry. They must learn to combine resources and ingenuities to survive and ultimately thwart a danger threatening to break free into the world at large, all the while pursued by a sociopath as cunning as he is sadistic./p pIn the end, emMicro/em has everything you?€d expect in a Crichton novel?€”and so much more. But the greatest achievement here is a simple and profound one: with this novel, the legacy of a true master continues to shine forth in all its multifaceted glory. And someone somewhere will read this novel, turn the last page, and in a great aura of awe and inspiration, come to a realization: emI want to try to write stories like that./em/p pAnd they will./pp/pProduct Descriptionp/ppiIn Jurassic Park, he created a terrifying new world. Now, in Micro, Michael Crichton reveals a universe too small to see and too dangerous to ignore./i/ppIn a locked Honolulu office building, three men are found dead with no sign of struggle except for the ultrafine, razor-sharp cuts covering their bodies. The only clue left behind is a tiny bladed robot, nearly invisible to the human eye./ppIn the lush forests of Oahu, groundbreaking technology has ushered in a revolutionary era of biological prospecting. Trillions of microorganisms, tens of thousands of bacteria species, are being discovered; they are feeding a search for priceless drugs and applications on a scale beyond anything previously imagined./ppIn Cambridge, Massachusetts, seven graduate students at the forefront of their fields are recruited by a pioneering microbiology start-up. Nanigen MicroTechnologies dispatches the group to a mysterious lab in Hawaii, where they are promised access to tools that will open a whole new scientific frontier./ppBut once in the Oahu rain forest, the scientists are thrust into a hostile wilderness that reveals profound and surprising dangers at every turn. Armed only with their knowledge of the natural world, they find themselves prey to a technology of radical and unbridled power. To survive, they must harness the inherent forces of nature itself./ppAn instant classic, Micro pits nature against technology in vintage Crichton fashion. Completed by visionary science writer Richard Preston, this boundary-pushing thriller melds scientific fact with pulse-pounding fiction to create yet another masterpiece of sophisticated, cutting-edge entertainment./p
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