- JURASSIC PARK
- by Michael Crichton
- [rated by PBS readers as #52]
- 448 pages
- (yours truly not a huge fan of the movie, but here we go!)
4/18/19
Okay, I have the book but I haven’t even opened it yet. I have to share a new fear first.
While I was at the Barnes & Noble in Santa Rosa picking this book up, I was wandering around, as I have want to do in just about any bookstore. And, for the first time I can ever remember, I wandered over to the sci-fi section. I knew I had to get a couple of books from those shelves for this list, so I was a intrigued to peruse an area I had never hung out in.
I knew I wouldn’t remember most of the titles but I certainly knew Chronicles of Narnia. I thought I was picking up the top book in a stack and then I found out that one book WAS the stack. Makes me realize that I have to keep on trucking, in case I pull a book that takes me a year! Dune was on a shelf nearby and plenty thick too, but this thing was as wide as a piano!
Ah well. I really expect them all to be good books and good writers so I’m game. Well, with the exception of Fifty Shades of Grey, which has to be just about the most confusing title on this list. The only thing I will gain when I read that is shelf space. My sister loaned it to me years ago and there it sits.
But, as usual, I digress!
4/25/19
I don’t want to jinx this book, but I’m about a week in and almost half way through. I am really liking it. Not a page turner yet, but sort of terminally curiosity producing! And even then, I am just entering the page turner phase right now, so I expect to move through it pretty fast.
Wow. For a gal who has no curiosity about dinosaurs, I’m surprised and pleased with how much I’m into this.
One odd side effect – the occasional dinosaur will show up in my dreams at night. And not because it fits in the theme of the dream at all! Just because all of a sudden, there’s a dinosaur!
Definitely great writing, especially considering all the crap he needs to put in there to set it up and move the story and none of that is boring! It is precisely the stuff that doesn’t make it into a movie and it is probably why I didn’t like the movie as much.
I am a bit lost as to who is who in the control booth right now.There a few too many grizzly doubters who think Hammond is over the top. One can easily lose who is who. I also find it fairly far fetched in the plot that hundreds of people have been working on this and the secret hasn’t gotten out.
But – fairness check to stick in here. I am an unabashed Bond fan and all the evil geniuses end up having carloads of guys quietly helping them blow up the world with no questions asked. So I have to give that quibble a pass.
And these are small things. The main thrust pulls you in and slowly portends that things aren’t going to go all that well there!
I love the place being portrayed as state of the art and yet the botanist notices they have mistakenly decorated with poisonous ferns! Great stuff…
4/29/19
Feel like I need to put this one little thought in, not related specifically to Jurassic.
Jurassic is going great, by the way. I am having fun with turning pages and absorbing it all while the dinosaurs slowly eat up the cast of characters.
But my side point is that, in turning 60, I wonder if books can be read really efficiently anymore. When you are young and it’s a good book, you read it straight through, which is precisely the way a good book is meant to be read! Now in my life, a dinosaur eats somebody and I go off to six different functions in three days and when I sit back down to read it, I feel like it’s been a year since the last smorgasbord!
No real question and no real answer. I know that, in 100 books read, I will not have the excitement of discovering something brand new. These books have all been well discovered. Maybe discovery has always been an illusion anyway… But I’d like to think that somewhere in here, I am going to let myself drop deeply into a book, with no interruptions. I drop in now, all the time.
But I’d like to drop in deeper.
5/4/19
Well, I finished it! I must say it more than kept my interest the whole way through.
Crichton has a definite and amazing set of skills. His story has great structure. You find your mind staying up with the premise and there is plenty of exposition to keep you believing at least in the concept of the thing.
I admired two things the most about his writing. I liked the way that he was able to move with ease between so many different points of view. He jumped from story to story and you quickly moved into the new person’s point of view, allowing the suspense to grow exponentially. For instance, when several people are talking together and have no idea that their brethren are out there being munched up by the dinosaurs. Great way to build the storyline – and always by those who are not the wiser yet!
I also think that he writes fabulous dinosaur attacks. I marveled at how they were all surprising, even when you were expecting one. It would literally leap off the page at you. The big scare point was always shocking.
Malcolm and his lectures on mathematics were a bit tedious. I found it crafty and a good solution to have him dying throughout, so that all the others were forced to hear his rants. But they were still rants and got a bit heavy handed, especially from someone who was supposedly getting more light headed by the minute.
All in all, a great read and I’m the richer for having read it. Now if I could just move on from the dinosaurs! So now I will pick.
I picked an interesting bunch. The three titles I came up with are two for younger readers – Ghost & Little Women, while Coldest Winter Ever is a whole other thing! I have decided that I would like to read them all next, so once again tomorrow, I will set off on finding out what my local bookstore has and then the Barnes & Nobel a bit farther away. I’ll get whatever I can and decide then.
Hey Cyn!
So I am confused by the dates on this one, since it shows April and May of last year, but maybe you are just now getting them into the blog, but read them the year we turned 60? (I turned 60 last Sept, but I know you just had a bday) ANYWAY I digress. I laughed out LOUD about “Fifty Shades of Grey” What a disaster! You can give me some good, hot sex in a well-written book, but that book was like something that should be used as TP in an outhouse in a remote cabin. I had just had foot surgery on both feet when that came out. I made it about 40 pages in and threw it away! When you are housebound and throw a book away (I wasn’t even going to donate to the library) you know it is bad. Jurassic Park was such a compelling read, and two other faves of mine of his were “AirFrame” and “Congo”. They probably aren’t on your list, but enjoy them some day! Happy reading of the next 3. I loved Little Women and could happily read it ten times, but not sure if Ghost is what the movie was based on? And never heard of the 3rd one. Have fun!
Laurie – No pressure, girl, but I’ve come to rely on your follow ups to each book, so I’d be sad to not get one. But like I said, no pressure! As for my age, I’m 61 now, thanks for sharing it with the world! Just kidding, I don’t care at all! I started this thing a month or two before my 60th and the years are flying by! The one I just put in, Little Women, was my 8th and I’m on my 18th now. I’ll catch up! Now that I can’t leave the house!
Take care and thanks for writing. Love the 50 Shades and foot surgery story!
Hi Cyn,
Sorry, Phil’s birthday was St. Patty’s Day, I am dealing with some medical issues and so is Phil’s mom, we are having snow, AND now this pandemic! I don’t usually read or reply to this on my phone, rather do it on my computer. SO, here I finally am.
By the way, first off…I am with you 100% on loving REAL books and refusing to get an electronic reader instead. I love the feel, smell of books and libraries in general (even though I wipe mine down with antibacterial wipes as soon as I get it home from library), and I hope we will always have that! I am trying to stay positive this is only the “temporary” normal. And by the way, I do the exact same thing with bringing paperbacks on vacation and leaving them behind. In Fiji I left four or five and I noticed they had paperbacks in lots of languages (mostly German) where people had done the same.
So I told you I loved Little Women, but having said that, despite having read it multiple times I have not read it in decades! I might find the characters (and definitely the mores) antiquated and abrasive as well. However, even back when I first read it, Jo seemed a bit of a rebel for the time. Always loved her. I am bummed I didn’t get to see Greta’s movie version yet. I have seen the two older ones, loved the Winona Ryder version. I need to revisit the two older ones and then Greta’s newest. At any rate, I was chuckling about some of your comments including the small font thing! I hate trying to read those now too. So straining on the “old” eyes. Sorry for outing our age, ha ha. I will be 61 in Sept , so there ya go. I am not familiar with Another Country, but I loved The Help. However, you probably read that one in the past decade and saw the movie, as did most of us. So I don’t blame you for waiting to revisit.
Laurie – First, I hope everything medical turned out alright! I’m older than
you, if I didn’t establish that already. I was 61 in February. Besides, what
difference does it make how old we are if no one is ever going to see us again!
Holding a good thought that they will, anyway. Lots of love to you! Cynthia
I am enjoying reading our latest posts while sitting in our apartment in New Orleans so far from you and home. You have helped me get over my ever narrowing prejudices about fiction, especially sci-fi! Jurassic Park….saw the movie long after it was released and was definitely thrilled in the scary parts, but I never imagined I would be interested in actually reading the book. This and some of the other books you have reported on have expanded my interests, girl! Off to some of the wonderful used books shops and book stores around this very interesting city. Love you Cindoo!
Lucy – I’m so glad you are getting something out of this funny little blog! I’m really tickled. I think some of the ones coming up might be more your style, but hey. They are all worth reading. Well, almost all!
Miss you buckets! This quarantine would be perfect for a shitload of playing Mexican Train! Love you Lucy!