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Home > Book > State of Fear
State of Fear

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Editorial Reviews: 
The undisputed master of the techno-thriller has written his most riveting -- and entertaining -- book yet.

Once again Michael Crichton gives us his trademark combination of page-turning suspense, cutting-edge technology, and extraordinary research. State of Fear is a superb blend of edge-of-your-seat suspense and thought provoking commentary on how information is manipulated in the modern world. From the streets of Paris, to the glaciers of Antarctica to the exotic and dangerous Solomon Islands, State of Fear takes the reader on a rollercoaster thrill ride, all the while keeping the brain in high gear.

Amazon.com Exclusive Content

A Michael Crichton Timeline
Amazon.com reveals a few facts about the "father of the techno-thriller."

1942: John Michael Crichton is born in Chicago, Illinois on Oct. 23.

1960: Crichton graduates from Roslyn High School on Long Island, New York, with high marks and a reputation as a star basketball player. He decides to attend Harvard University to study English. During his studies, he rankles under his writing professors' criticism. As an act of rebellion, Crichton submits an essay by George Orwell as his own. The professor doesn?t catch the plagiarism and gives Orwell a B-. This experience convinces Crichton to change his field of study to anthropology.

1964: Crichton graduates summa cum laude from Harvard University in anthropology. After studying further as a visiting lecturer at Cambridge University and receiving the Henry Russell Shaw Travelling Fellowship, which allowed him to travel in Europe and North Africa, Crichton begins coursework at the Harvard School of Medicine. To help fund his medical endeavors, he writes spy thrillers under several pen names. One of these works, A Case of Need, wins the 1968 Mystery Writers of America's Edgar Allan Poe Award.

1969: Crichton graduates from Harvard Medical school and is accepted as a post-doctoral fellow at the Salk Institute for Biological Science in La Jolla, Calif. However, his career in medicine is waylaid by the publication of the first novel under his own name, The Andromeda Strain. The novel, about an apocalyptic plague, climbs high on bestseller lists and is later made into a popular film. Crichton said of his decision to pursue writing full time: "To quit medicine to become a writer struck most people like quitting the Supreme Court to become a bail bondsman."

1972: Crichton's second novel under his own name The Terminal Man, is published. Also, two of Crichton's previous works under his pen names, Dealing and A Case of Need are made into movies. After watching the filming, Crichton decides to try his hand at directing. He will eventually direct seven films including the 1973 science-fiction hit Westworld, which was the first film ever to use computer-generated effects.

1980: Crichton draws on his anthropology background and fascination with new technology to create Congo, a best-selling novel about a search for industrial diamonds and a new race of gorillas. The novel, patterned after the adventure writings of H. Ryder Haggard, updates the genre with the inclusion of high-tech gadgets that, although may seem quaint 20 years later, serve to set Crichton's work apart and he begins to cement his reputation as "the father of the techno-thriller."

1990: After the 1980s, which saw the publication of the underwater adventure Sphere (1987) and an invitation to become a visiting writer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1988), Crichton begins the new decade with a bang via the publication of his most popular novel, Jurassic Park. The book is a powerful example of Crichton's use of science and technology as the bedrock for his work. Heady discussion of genetic engineering, chaos theory, and paleontology run throughout the tightly-wound thriller that strands a crew of scientists on an island populated by cloned dinosaurs run amok. The novel inspires the 1993 Steven Spielberg film, and together book and film will re-ignite the world?s fascination with dinosaurs.

1995: Crichton resurrects an idea from his medical school days to create the Emmy-Award Winning television series ER. In this year, ER won eight Emmys and Crichton received an award from the Producers Guild of America in the category of outstanding multi-episodic series. Set in an insanely busy an often dangerous Chicago emergency room, the fast-paced drama is defined by Crichton's now trademark use of technical expertise and insider jargon. The year also saw the publication of The Lost World returning readers to the dinosaur-infested island.

2000: In recognition for Crichton's contribution in popularizing paleontology, a dinosaur discovered in southern China is named after him. "Crichton's ankylosaur" is a small, armored plant-eating dinosaur that dates to the early Jurassic Period, about 180 million years ago. "For a person like me, this is much better than an Academy Award," Crichton said of the honor.

2004: Crichton?s newest thriller State of Fear is published.


Amazon.com's Significant Seven
Michael Crichton kindly agreed to take the life quiz we like to give to all our authors: the Amazon.com Significant Seven.

Q: What book has had the most significant impact on your life?
A:Prisoners of Childhood by Alice Miller

Q: You are stranded on a desert island with only one book, one CD, and one DVD--what are they?
A:Tao Te Ching by Lao Tzu (Witter Bynner version)
Symphony #2 in D Major by Johannes Brahms (Georg Solti)
Ikiru by Akira Kurosawa

Q: What is the worst lie you've ever told?
A: Surely you're joking.

Q: Describe the perfect writing environment.
A: Small room. Shades down. No daylight. No disturbances. Macintosh with a big screen. Plenty of coffee. Quiet.

Q: If you could write your own epitaph, what would it say?
A: I don't want an epitaph. If forced, I would say "Why Are You Here? Go Live Your Life."

Q: Who is the one person living or dead that you would like to have dinner with?
A: Benjamin Franklin

Q: If you could have one superpower what would it be?
A: Invisibility



Custom Reviews: 
Bad Science and Bad Writing
1 out of 5 stars.
Are we still having this worn-out debate after all these years? My God, even when strong-armed by the Bush administration, his own science advisors had to tell him the truth that global warming is a fact. Thank goodness, the National Academy of Science could not be embarrassed into providing what the president wanted to hear!

Let's get on with the solutions.

Regarding the writing, I have somewhat enjoyed other Crichton novels, but the characters are so flat here one could cut them out with scissors. The "dumb" environmentalists are laughable as succumbing to "fear." I listened to the audiobook version, and the narrator made both scientists and their benefactors sound like buffoons. For a while, I thought that Mike Myers would show up to at least offer the reader some comic relief

If you want to look at a state of fear, just look last 7 ½ years of the Bush Administration and that's not fiction.

PLEASE start writing really great stories again!
2 out of 5 stars.
Oh my goodness, how I love the old Chricton ---intriguing concepts based on the latest new and cutting-edge technology - combined with a wonderful, page-turning story! State of Fear is another example of Chrichton's reincarnation - as an "I'll try to put a story around it - but I really want to lecture to my readers" type writer.

Admittedly, he probably took a risk. There are a lot of environmentalists out there that probably weren't thrilled about his latest line of thinking. While I think he could have picked a better issue (the whole book is really about how some people over-hype global warming - not that there isn't such a thing), what I really wanted and expected was the great novel I've come to expect when the Chricton name is on the cover. I didn't receive it.

It's not that he hasn't done his research. It's not that he doesn't know how to write (though I couldn't defend it from this book). It's just that, to me, it seems he's fallen into believing that his books are better served expressing his point of view and beating the heads of his readers over with it (who have paid for the not-so-pleasure), instead of creating powerful, page-turning, thought-provoking stories.

Oh, how I miss that great story-teller Chricton.

Reads like a religious tract
2 out of 5 stars.
I don't have a problem with bad science in fiction, or the author's point of view. But, it's presented in a totally ham-fisted manner here. The book begins with extensive descriptions of environmentalists as evil and/or ignorant. So, I figure Crichton's weaving a plot twist, and it will turn out the environmentalists are being framed. But no, they're lying, evil, murderous scum from the beginning to the end. No twist.

And, he inserts several lengthy lectures as to how fighting pollution is more dangerous than allowing it unchecked. And the wonders of DDT and benzene. And how academia is corrupt while industry scientists are noble and pure. And how anyone who understands the issues comes around to the pro-industry view. And how mainstream environmentalists funnel millions of dollars to terrorists.

Again, I had no expectation that the author of Jurassic Park would make it scientifically accurate. I was expecting fiction. But, the shrill anti-environmentalism makes it advocacy, not entertainment.

===== Update ======

Today I read his comments at the end. In it, he claims that government scientists usually repeat the positions of the government that funds them. Coincidentally, this story is on the front page of today's Washington Post:

"Members of Vice President Cheney's staff censored congressional testimony by a top federal official on the health threats posed by global warming, a former Environmental Protection Agency official said today."

So, rather than repeating the party line, government scientists have instead risked their careers to tell the truth, namely that global warming is a real threat.

Not Crichton's best
3 out of 5 stars.
State of fear is not Crichton's best work. I found the "thriller" to be some what boring and lacking in suspence, and I struggled to finish the book. Crichton's message that global warming is a farce seems outdated and foolish.

Great read, thought provoking
5 out of 5 stars.
In this book, Michael Crichton gives a view of the idea of "global warming", that we NEVER hear in the media. The documented data he presents is VERY eye opening to how much we really do live in a state of fear unnecessarily and how the media, political scene and others spend billions to keep us misinformed, afraid and duped.

Read this book no matter which side of the fence you are on. It is NOT delusional or libertarian.

Thanks,Mr.Crichton for writing this book.




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