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Women's Fiction
Timeline (Unabridged)

Timeline (Unabridged)

List Price: $39.95
Your Price: $9.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: It was good!
Review: I thought this book was good. I don't have the foggiest idea what quantum physics is, and don't really care. However, Mr. Crichton made the physics aspect of the book easy to understand. I really enjoyed the thought of being able to return to a time that you are interested in. I think the book is well-written and easy to follow. If you want a good read, with some "fantasy" and history involved, this is it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: His best in many years
Review: I finished this book several days ago and I can say that it is probably his best book since "Disclosure." I read it in two days and enjoyed it immensely. Although parts of it seemed contrived, it was not nearly so bad as in "The Lost World." The book is about this billionaire named Doniger who has secretly developed this technology giving him the ability to travel to other worlds - literally. Although it's called time travel, it doesn't work the way it does in H. G. Wells' "The Time Machine," for instance. Instead, according to Crichton, there are an infinity of alternate worlds, existing along side each other, incompassing all times and all actions. Somehow Doniger has found a wormhole enabling him to enter one of these alternate worlds. In particular, he has gotten to medieval France in 1357, and plans to build a theme park to cash in. Accidentally a Professor Johnston gets trapped in this world, so Doniger sends a team, including Johnston's students, in after him on what should be a fairly simple search and retrieve mission. But, as in all Crichton's books, something goes wrong. Most of the book is about how the students struggle to stay alive in this very violent world, and find the Professor and return home. A character named Andre Marek will seem most memorable. The novel's ending seemed weak and hurried, as though Crichton was in a rush to finish it before deadline. I think the best recommendation I can give Crichton's new novel is that it inspired me to dig up and reread Crichton's other novels, which I hadn't touched in five years.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Disappointed
Review: I was very excited when I heard that Michael Crichton had written a new book. After all, I've always enjoyed his books tremendously (especially after he tore the press a new one during a talk to the National Press Corps a few years ago in Washington--I have been a BIG Crichton fan since then). After the first few chapters I was hoping the story would develop into another one of the wonderful Crichton techno-thrillers but the book deteriorated into a medieval adventure story after about fifty pages. If you are into adventure stories, by all means buy this book. But this adventure story could never live up to Clive Cussler.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great book from Crichton, as usual
Review: I found this to be an excellent book. The pace moves right along and it is hard to put down. The premise might be stretching it a bit, but hey,...it could happen! I love the way Crichton writes; easy to read, to the point and he makes the technical stuff accessible to all readers. Its hard to rate this against his other books because they all are equally great. You won't be disappointed to buy this book.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Enjoyable
Review: I am somewhat surprised by some of the reviews I have read for Timeline. I purchased the 6 hour audio version (read by Stephen Lang - an excellent job) for the Thanksgiving road trip, and enjoyed it enough to add the book to my basket.

Timeline sets up the story by saying that while the concept (time travel, or actually multi-universe travel) is impossible, we are surrounded by everyday things which would have been unimagined or considered impossible at the turn of the last century.

Then, like a good X Files story, little things happen which cannot be explained. At the center of these impossibilities is a secretive, multi-billion dollar corporation led by an aggresive billionaire with a very hard edge (I thought Crichton borrowed some characteristics from Bill Gates).

Eventually, our key characters are thrust back in time for a quick and simple mission. But as always happens in a good story, things go terribly wrong, and they find they must survive in this somewhat alien and definitely dangerous world.

This book borrows much of the storyline from Jurrasic Park: Super rich guy uses science to create the impossible (and for the same reason), things go wrong, and it is a chase until the end. The story did strike me as being scripted for a movie, but that is par for the course for Crichton. It was definitely an enjoyable escape.

A book with a very similar storyline (historian goes back into the middle ages to observe, and things go terribly wrong), is Connie Willis' Doomsday Book. I recommend both.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: reading it was an emotional and educational experience
Review: The application of the Quantum Physics theories was fascinating with its contrasts of "then" and "now".The time of knighthood sounded about as raw as it probably was! The characters were larger than life but also believably vulnerable and imperfect.(I wondered who his models were?)I couldn't stop reading and when I finished I felt like I had been through a Raiders of the Lost Ark experience!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Is something wrong with the current 4-star rating?
Review: Up front, I've not read this book nor am I obsessed with numbers, but I was struck by the fact that the book had an overall 4-star rating over 28 reviews when I could see a lot of 1- and 2-star reviews. So I counted the reviews (35 actually) along with the stars (126) and came up with a 3.6-star rating. (Are these things rounded up?) In fairness to the number of reviews mentioned, I subtracted the last 7 reviews to back up to the 28-review mark and re-tallied the score for a 3.35-star rating.

I mention all this because I was considering buying the book and, like most lazy/busy people, I tend to look at the average star rating to give me a clue. I wonder if this book is the exception or if this sort of accounting is standard. (Sorry for skewing the curve with a 3-star rating...I had to give it something to enter this message. Considering the accuracy of the existing curve, however, it probably doesn't matter much)

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Like usual, an original
Review: Pretty good book,finished all 450 pages in 2 days. That shows how much excitement there was in that book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Doomsday Book Redux
Review: Am I the only one who sees the more than striking similarity betweenTimeline and The Doomsday Book by Connis Willis? The church, the egocentric bad guy, the internal translater, oh no are we going to get back to the correct time period, etc, etc, etc. Where Crichton cannot seem to make the characters believable and three dimensional, Willis does....read the far superior Doomsday Book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Don't make time for Crichton's Timeline
Review: You'd think a book about time travel, written by the author of "Jurassic Park," would be great escapist fiction. Instead, Michael Crichton's "Timeline" is a book to escape [[[[ital]]]]from[[[[[end ital]]]]]. To his credit, Crichton takes the "what if" genre very seriously. He does a lot of research, and his creations are often rooted in cutting-edge science. In "Timeline," a shadowy high-tech corporation called ITC learns how to reconfigure a human being and slip him into another universe. This technology involves quantum physics and parallel computing. Crichton understands this stuff, but the average reader may feel about six college degrees of separation from it. ITC is also funding the restoration of a medieval French ruin. Professor Johnston, head of the restoration team, discovers what ITC is doing and demands to be sent to 14th-century France. Johnston lands in trouble and before you can say "pass the Grey Poupon," three of his colleagues are beamed to medieval France to save him. "Timeline" is filled with silly dialogue and thinly etched characters. The only interesting one is medieval historian Andre Marek, a slab of Mensa beefcake with a jones for jousting. His ultimate fate is easy to guess. The brutish action takes place during a war that actually happened, but repetition and predictability ultimately drain the thrills. Marek and Co. run around castles and mix it up with knights. They get separated and reunited. They get thrown into dank cells and then escape. Meanwhile, the cast of British and French medieval characters spend most of the book scheming and yelling. Worse, Crichton assigns the main villain - ITC chief Doniger - a punishment that makes the heroes look bad. "Timeline" is about satisfying as watching armor rust.


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