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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: 5 stars
Summary: Time Travel Done Right
Review: I have never been a fan of the topic of time-travel in sci-fi. They often seem to deal with offspring going back in time and interfering in the lives of relatives, thus disrupting their present lives, etc, etc. But Crichton has found a way that is easier to swallow, more believable and that gives the characters and plot much more freedom.

Quantum technology is the scientific focus of this book, using subatomic phenomenon for things such as high powered computing and time-travel. If you are not a physics major, fear not. Crichton pens a great scene where this is explained for the unaware in some of the simplest terms.

Crichton also sheds light on the dark ages, drastically challenging our notions of this period in human history, from language to the true nature of the warriors in this period.

Character development did not seem to be evenly spread out, with lesser characters receiving more attention than some main characters. There are plenty of action sequences spread out through the novel to keep the reader in rapture. This book was just another great Crichton page-turner

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not good enough...
Review: First of all, I like Crichton. His books are well researched with excellent backup of technologial knowledge. Jurassia Park, Air Frame, Disclosure are my favourite. But Timeline... if it is a movie, it's just an ordinary action movie. Sorry, it's not an A grade one. Just sort of B grade or even C grade.

Many writers have written about time travelling. So no big deal. Crichton still has done a great job in introducing the theory of time travelling. It is the best part. However, when the main characters jump into the past, this techno thriller suddenly turns into an ordinary action movie with people going there, leaving here, meeting someone, fighting someone, etc. The main part becomes the boring part.

If you have time, try other Crichton's books.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One rip-roaring adventure
Review: This is one fast paced read that will keep you awake if you turn that first page after dinner! This is Crichton doing some of his best work. I don't agree that it is a match for Jurassic Park but it has its own merits. The characters are well-developed and the obligatory villain is not as obvious as one might think. If you are a student of H.G. Wells, you will appreciate the 21st Century version of The Time Machine.

In conclusion I highly recommend this book! It will allow you to suspend belief, forget your daily troubles, and have some good clean fun!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: fascinating, but JP has it beat
Review: Many people love Michael Crichton books. I do. When you are looking for a guy who gives you all the information, he is the one to read. He gets in depth about the Quantum computer and makes it interesting, but it takes effort to understand. Even then, the book itself is good overall. I highly reccomend it to people interested in mideval times. The novel is very discriptive in a sense that he researches every aspect of it. i still say JP has it beat.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Stop writing movie scripts and get back to writing books...
Review: Crichton is one of the few modern authors that I would consider myself to be a fan of. That being said, I was thoroughly disappointed by this book. Featuring the usual cast of characters that have admittedly become a staple of Crichton's work, this book seems to get off to a decent start but then goes nowhere faster than a T-Rex chases a car through the jungle. I found myself constantly waiting for the moment when things would get interesting, when those plot twists would finally show up. But alas, by the time you get far enough into this book for it to become even remotely interesting, which I'm not sure it even really does, it is almost over.

It seems that Mr. Crichton has taken to writing books in the hopes of making movie deals out of them, as I could see this making for a fun mindless action flick, but if you are expecting anything more than people going on a romp through the middle ages trying not to get killed by various people for seemingly arbitrary reasons, you will be sorely disappointed. If you saw the wretched Jurassic Park: Lost World movie, just replace the dinosaurs with angry people from the Middle Ages, and you have a good idea of how this whole book goes. How many times can one really avoid getting hit by weapons through sheer luck anyway?

You could just read the first third or half of this book and then just skip to the last few chapters, since it is basically more of the same up until then. Really, you probably would never know the difference...

If you want to read a good Crichton book, pick up Sphere (but make sure to stay away from the utterly atrocious movie or it will likely ruin the book for you), or The Andromeda Strain. (Probably just about everyone who has read Crichton has read Jurassic Park, so I'm not going to tell you to read that one.) I haven't read Prey yet, but the current reader rating on this site does not give me high hopes.

Please, if you really must read this book, which you probably will since you are reading this review, get it from the library. Do not encourage any more of this made-for-movie-deal not-quite-literature by shelling out money for it.

I gave this book more than 1 star because it was at least tolerable enough for me to bear with it until the completely anticlimatic ending. I would really like to give it 1 and a 1/2 stars, if only I could.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A low point in Crichton's career
Review: "Timeline" presents to us a new breakthrough in technology, the ability to time travel into the past. The man responsible for footing the bill for this miracle intends to cash in on the new technology by turning time travel into entertainment for the wealthy. Enter a group of historians and linguists who have many qualms about how this technology is being used, but discover that their mentor has disappeared into 13th century France and apparently been killed in the past. They use the far-from-perfected (and rather dangerous) technology to follow the professor into the past and attempt to rescue him if possible, using their superb knowledge of medieval customs, old French, and ancient technology to survive numerous life-threatening situations involving knights and other menacing armed men. They rescue the professor and escape back to the future. At the end, the evil billionaire earns death through his own invention and is sent back to the Black Plague era in France.

Does it sound familiar? If it does, that's because Michael Crichton already wrote this novel in the early nineties, but back then he titled it "Jurassic Park." That novel involved a new breakthrough in technology, the ability to clone dinosaurs. The man responsible for footing the bill for this miracle intends to cash in on the new technology by turning the dinosaurs into entertainment for the wealthy. Enter a group of paleontologists and botanists who have many qualms about how this technology is being used, and discover that one of the scientists has his own designs on selling the technology. Because of this the system for holding the dinosaurs fails, and they must use their superb knowledge of dinosaurs and their habits in order to survive numerous life-threatening situations involving a T-rex and other menacing dinosaurs. They manage to escape the dangers and escape the island. At the end, the evil billionaire earns death through his own invention and dies when several small dinosaurs gang up and eat him.

If anyone else had written "Timeline," Michael Crichton and his publishers would have sued the author for having essentially ripped off "Jurassic Park." As it stands, "Timeline" reveals that Crichton is currently running low on ideas and is resorting to repeating tried and true formula writing in order to satisfy his contractual obligations.

I could forgive the obvious rehash of the older story if Crichton had polished his writing, his character development, and/or his dialogue. Sadly, as with his previous novels, the characters in "Timeline" remain as flat as the pages they are printed on, and the dialogue is entirely unrealistic. Real people simply do not talk the way the characters do in this story (although, they do speak like that in a George Lucas film).

I am being generous in giving the novel two stars. If you can get past the fact that the story itself is flat, you can find a wealth of intriguing information about life in medieval France. Crichton clearly spent a great deal of time researching and reading about nearly every aspect of 13th century life, including food, clothing, weaponry, warfare and tactics, chivalry, social classes and customs, and more. If he had spent as much time crafting a story worthy of all that research, this could have surpassed "Jurassic Park" as Crichton's masterpiece.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Timeline
Review: Timeline was the first Micheal Crichton I have ever read, however I did see some movies that were based on his books. This book was sweet. It stated off a little weak, talking about all that physics and how they discovered the other universes. Once they got in the machines and went back to the other universe the story really picked up. This book was action packed with a suprise around every corner. The fighting with swords and the jousting were the crazy coolest part of the book. I was shocked when Marek wanted to stay behind; I sort of suspected when he kept starring at that old guy. The epilouge was very suprising. First they found Andre's sarcofigous, and then I found out that he hooked up with Lady Claire. That was nuts. Overall it was an enjoyable read.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: All Science, No Substance
Review: This was the first book I ever read by Micheal Crichton and I was very disappointed. After hearing such rave reviews about him from friends and the media, I picked up this book, a time-travel (or rather people-traveling, because "time doesn't travel, people travel") book that taught me more about quantum physics than I ever wanted to know. The first hundred pages of this book are an Ok introduction to what I expected to be a good book, but Crichton spend the next hundred pages explaining quantum physics in "simple" terms. If that wasn't boring enough, I never felt like I knew any of the characters beyond their stereotypes of strong man, prep student, and tomboy. I'm sorry I even bothered to finish this book. It was a tremendous waste of time. Perhaps other books by Crichton are better, but I'm not about to try to read them.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Timeline
Review: I thought timeline was a great book because it is science ficton and is very persuasive about making you believe that time travel was posible. I have read many of his books and I like them all so I have no regrets about reading this book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Best book by Crichton yet!
Review: This was a superb book, an absolute page turner. I completely forgot that I had history homework due the next day when I picked up this book - fortunately, it was my history teacher who gave me the book in the first place, so there wasn't really a problem. This book was very well researched, but Crichton doesn't throw the information in your face, with a know-it-all attitude. The information is presented more subtlely, in the context of the story. Without giving anything away, the two plots that are told in parallel are both engaging, keeping the reader wondering how everything will turn out.


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