Rating:  Summary: TIMELINE IS ALMOST TIMELESS TALE! Review: I literally just finished reading this exciting novel just a couple of hours ago and just had to review this exciting and fun read to you readers out there. TIMELINE begins with an enigmatic and corporate chewer named Doniger whom has finally thru many hard years of work, has finally found out how to travel thru time. It is kept a secret for awhile, but like all large and important secrets - this one is unraveling fast, getting ready to be exposed. Professor Johnston is a renowned historian who is trying to put history back together again by gathering around himself a small group of student historians who love him like a father. The historians are in France, studying old ruins of mills and castles of the 14th century. The historians work is owned ans run by none other but the ILT Corp, which is owned by the scrupulous Mr. Doniger himself! When professor Johnston finds out that the company he is working for is holding secrets of his hard work, he confronts his boss Mr. Doniger, who tricks his employeee to literally go back in time to see his ruins firsthand. Mr. Doniger traps him in time so his secret is not leaked to the press which professor Johnston would surely do since their disagreement. The professor is stuck in time, a time where knights run amok and kill everything in sight - especially strange looking people! The professor's students find a message in the ruins of the castle they are studying from the professor from the distant past! This sets them on a course with history that they cannot fathom. The company sends them back in time to save their teacher from a brutal and savage time period. Disaster strikes just minutes when they arrive, and the students are thrown into action and adventure that Michael Crighton writes so well. The plot and pace of this novel are very enjoyable and never bogged down with too much detail. My favorite character was Marek, a student of the time period whom has studied the 14th century to so much detail, that he knew all about jousting and swordplay that come to the groups much needed help in the distant past. The ending was good and a little sad which makes it rememberable. If you like a good tale with plenty of action and want to see what it was like in the 14th century - read this one!
Rating:  Summary: Bravo! Review: Bravo! This book deserves a standing ovation! Chrichton does it again by weaving an interesting tale of medieval culture with modern science. This is a must read for sci-fi readers and history buffs alike.
Rating:  Summary: Great book, non-stop read Review: This was my first Crichton novel and I thought that it was amazing. I started reading it and could not stop. This book is full of action and adventure. I actually thought that time travel was possible after reading it explained in this book. I'd recommend this book to anyone who likes sci-fi or fantasy.
Rating:  Summary: Has it come to this? Review: If your aim is to while away time--in an airplane, in the dentist's waiting room, wherever--this works fine, but that's really all I can say for it. As fluff stuff goes TIMELINE is not top grade, but it is all right. Don't get me wrong: I like fluff as much as the next guy, and even if you disagree and think this IS top grade fluff stuff, that's fine by me. It is NOT fine by me if you call it "a masterpiece"--not because I myself happen to consider it mediocre, but because the nature of the genre itself rules out the possibility of masterpieces. Understand me, by "the genre" I do not mean science fiction--science fiction has masterpieces (Aldous Huxley's "Brave New World" and H.G. Wells's "The Time Machine", for examples)--; I mean fluff: There are no fluff masterpieces. You'd might as well compare Britney Spears to Mozart, and our (lack of) culture has got to a sorry state when this is not universally recognized.
Rating:  Summary: Time Travel? Ho Hum... Review: "Timeline" is an uneasy mixture of "Jurassic Park" (without the dinosaurs) and "The Princess Bride" (without the laughs). Once again, super-secret cutting edge technology puts a non-descript (i.e. dull) group of scientists in mortal jeapordy. Can they escape the snarling knights and return to the 20th century before time runs out? Does anyone really care? For all the dangers that the 14th century apparently presented, Crichton is simply not a good enough writer to maintain any suspense whatsoever. His "action" scenes read like outlines for a proposed screenplay. And because the characters are such ciphers, our emotions are never invested in what happens to them. Don't waste your time.
Rating:  Summary: Anthony Michaels review for "Timeline" Review: It was a very good book. Very well written, and very well edited. Michael Crichton, again, managed to entertain his readers. It had a creative and wonderful story, along with great action. The only reason this book got 4 stars instead of 5, was because it was a little drawn out. The story wasn't as confusing, but some parts of the book were kind of boring, which is why it got the number of stars that it did. But, please don't get me wrong. This is an excellent book, and if you read it... I think you'll enjoy it.ALSO WRITTEN BY MICHAEL CRICHTON The Andromeda Strain Jurassic Park Sphere
Rating:  Summary: Crichton disappoints me.....disappoints me terribly. Review: It is difficult to believe that the man who wrote excellent novels such as "The Great Train Robbery" and "The Andromeda Strain" actually had this garbage published. Crichton takes the concept of time travel, propably the most worn-out and overused idea of science fiction, and implements it in a manner so moronic and unconvincing that I actually had difficulty believing he wrote the damn thing. Perhaps he left it to his marketing team. ;) Timeline features a rich array of stereotypical characters and a plot with more holes than a Swiss cheese, intertwined with implausible physics techno-babble. The majority of this 500 page book is spent on describing how the stereotypical protagonists again and again miraculously escape from brutal death at the hands of late 14th century butchers. I cannot help but wonder if Crichton has let fame rise to his head. If he thinks he can get away with stuff like Timeline, he's wrong. This is trash, and even worse, it's popular trash.
Rating:  Summary: Good, if a bit slow Review: A corporation in New Mexico has figured out how to send people back in time. Meanwhile, a professor working for them in France wonders how they know certain things about the medieval site he's working on. The professor travels to New Mexico to find out what is going on, he ends up traveling back in time and getting stuck there. Now a group of historians must travel back to the 14th century to rescue their professor... While other reviewers seemed to be disappointed that there wasn't more science in the book, I was quite happy about that. I would have liked to read more about them in the medieval period. The concept of the book was very interesting. The problem was that it really dragged in parts. In fact, the first 100 pages or so were so slow that I almost gave up on the book. Overall I ended up liking it, so I'm glad I pushed on.
Rating:  Summary: A familiar successful formula Review: Michael Crichton uses a similar formula to tell his tale in Timeline as he used in Jurassic Park. He fabricates a quasi-believeable scientific breakthrough to create an almost realistic adventure. In Jurassic Park, he uses the utterly brilliant concept of using DNA gleaned from insects trapped in prehistoric amber to replicate dinosaurs. The concept used in Timeline is slightly less remarkable. Quantum theory is used by a high tech corporation as the basis for time transportation. Characters in the book are sent back to the Dordogne river valley in France in the Middle Ages to rescue a colleague that has become trapped there. The story shifts back and forth from the boardroom of the huge corporation to the midst of The Hundred Years War in 1347. I found that I was more involved with the action taking place in the feudal Middle Ages, which was far less predictable than the present day. Although Crichton did an adequate job in describing the Middle Age setting, I definitely craved more of that. All in all, I kept on turning those pages but there were times that I longed to be lost in the past, as the characters were, rather than muddling through the present.
Rating:  Summary: Crichton doesn't write books, he writes screenplays. Review: A truly desperate effort to pen one on space-time. The first few chapters squeeze-in some interesting theoretical-physics (pre-existing and proposed theories like quantum foam, dimensional interference etc.) to set the base for a poor storyline in false hopes to sling-shot a then drawn-out medieval tale. Crichton should stick with the pop genera.
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