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Review: Michael Crichton’s “Prey”

Books Friday, November 29, 2002 . This is a SciScoop post by Ricky James

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In some ways willing suspension of disbelief has to be applied less to the technology depicted and more to the relationships between our protagonists Jake and Julia. They’re the typical Silicon Valley couple, all right, but oh how conveniently their relationship advances the plot. He’s the between-jobs programming team manager who’s specialized in code that models distributed processing and genetic algorithms. She’s the cute PR talking head that is lining up funding for the revolutionary Xymos nanobots. He’s the cool, loving house-dad that takes care of the cute kids. She’s the always-working cold bitch that’s having an affair – isn’t she? With the tanned surfing god Xymos exec we hiss at as soon as we meet him? Or is this whole plot line perhaps a little too obvious after being set up by page 18? Maybe Crichton has something a little more twisted in mind for the 350 pages that follow…

Yep, he sure does, and as fast as helicopters can fly we’re at the secretive Xymos desert lab in Nevada where nothing is as it seems. Those swirling little dust devils out there on the parking lot security cameras are considerably more menacing than Taz in a Loony Tunes cartoon, but damned if anybody will give Jack a straight answer about just how…or especially why. Seems the escaped particles that make up the clouds have been programmed with distributed computing algorithms Jack came up with in his last job – Xymos wants HIM to tell THEM what’s going on. Uh, oh – Jack used the concept of predator / prey stalking dynamics to keep distributed agents focused on a concrete goal.

Jack’s subsequent experiences, experiments, thought processes, and realizations lead the reader into a fascinating exploration of the concept of hive mind. In one sense this is a book about prejudice – people are the most evolved social mammals on Earth, and as such are always misinterpreting the capabilities, actions and behaviors of a swarm that has neither leaders or followers, only members. As such, Prey is a rare SF book that truly does explore a truly alien life form with some very interesting twists. It’s also a thought-provoking possible example of Vernor Vinge’s technological singularity concept.

It’s a good book and it’s going to make a great movie. If you just can’t wait for the movie, though, no problem. Crichton’s three-act structure for Prey follows the well-trod path of a trio of 50s-style sci-fi movie classics: Tremors, Them!, and Invasion of the Body Snatchers. Check `em out and watch `em in order after you read Prey for a fun follow-up. To include the tension of Jack and Julia’s romantic triangle, watch Casablanca first…and remember, a kiss is just a kiss, as time goes by.

10 Responses to Review: Michael Crichton’s “Prey”

Drog

December 2nd, 2002 at 12:30 pm

Very nice review. I admit that I was a little skeptical about this book. Having heard so much about how Crichton was “back to form” and using his “tried and true” theme of science and scientists running amok, I wasn’t sure if his latest effort would breathe fresh life into a familiar theme or would simply be a stale rehashing of the same old thing, but updated with modern technology. Glad to hear it has some twists in it.

As for Vinge’s technological singularity, I am uncertain as to whether the next quantum leap in intelligence will be via the development of artificial intelligence or via the manipulation of our own DNA. Eventually, both seem certain to happen, with huge consequences for us all.

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Anonymous

December 8th, 2002 at 9:58 pm

…as his prose style is 21st Century California screenplay. His ideas are neither fresh nor his characters even 2 dimensional, and his descriptive powers have lately vanished (in Prey, his first person viewpoint character repeatedly TELLS us how “edgy” people are, rather than SHOWING us what is going on and letting us draw our own conclusions). While his earlier “The Andromeda Strain” was a wonderful scientific thriller, “Prey”, like his “Timeline”, “The Lost World” and “Sphere” have been merely reformatted screenplays. Instead, try some real SF, such as “Blood Music” by Greg Bear, “A Fire Upon The Deep” by Vernor Vinge, “Doomsday Book” by Connie Willis or even “Diplomatic Immunity” by Lois McMaster Bujold which all deal with plagues and have all won or been nominated for the Hugo Award for best SF novel of the year.

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Anonymous

March 12th, 2003 at 5:32 pm

I think this is practically his worst novel yet. I was so busy trying to ignore the word, “fuck,” “fucker,” “fucked,” and “fucking” that appeared several times on almost every page that I simply could not enjoy the elementary plot and storyline. It is obvious he wrote this one for the screen.

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Anonymous

April 15th, 2003 at 5:35 am

This is Crichton’s best work yet. Enough said.

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rujith

April 29th, 2003 at 8:00 am

Stupid story (read more like a screen-play), and the technology was
not even self-consistent. I’ve read virtually everything by Crichton,
mostly because his descriptions of technology are interesting. But
not in this case, sadly.

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Anonymous

May 27th, 2003 at 2:50 pm

I read every sci-fi book Crichton wrote and I agree Prey is his worst ever. It’s just screenplay on steroids. The Andromeda Strain, Jurassic Park, and Timeline were absolutely great but this one is just slapdash work. A big deception.

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Anonymous

October 15th, 2003 at 8:23 pm

Prey was great. The best Crichton book I have ever read.

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Anonymous

February 19th, 2004 at 7:58 am

cut your mullet

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Anonymous

March 25th, 2004 at 6:16 pm

Ok, look, You can’t diss Chrichton, his books are original and very entertaining/thought provoking. You act as if you are some higher being and that all this “Chrichton” stuff is below you. The books he writes fill the role they are meant to. If you dont like the books, you dont like the role, so don’t diss a SF author that could own you in any debate, and write around you in circles, the man is genius, go suck an egg.

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Anonymous

April 21st, 2005 at 12:03 am

The swearing was distracting but I liked this,Maybe as much as Jurassic Park. The story was interesting but that may have been because the last book I read was Dogsong.

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