| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Product Details
|
Suggested Tags from Similar Products(What's this?)Be the first one to add a relevant tag (keyword that's strongly related to this product)
|
|
Share your thoughts with other customers:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||
|
Most helpful customer reviews
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars
A so-so sequel that should have been better,
This review is from: The Lost World (Hardcover)
Michael Crichton came up a winner with "Jurassic Park". Who doesn't love dinosaurs? So when you hit a winning ticket, you exploit it for all you're worth, right? Well, yes and no. Crichton had a good idea for a sequel but he doesn't do it the justice it deserved. There was no reason to bring Malcolm back; his turning up alive after being pronounced dead was just plain lame. I suspect Crichton was tired of Grant/Sattler and wanted to go with a new team. But the idea of a secret island where the real work of Jurassic Park was carried out is pretty good; after Jurassic Park was abandoned, what became of all those leftover critters? Malcolm's new team proposes to go in and find out. As usual, the dinosaurs save the book; the plot is contrived in spots; the characterizations, except for the two youngsters, Arby and Kelly, are flat and uninteresting for the most part, but the dinosaurs fascinate us by just being dinosaurs. Especially compelling is Crichton's description of the raptor pack which has grown to young adulthood without adult modeling; bred from a test tube, they had no parents to provide an example for social existence, and the result, as Crichton shows us, is a pack of unsocialized predators living in a world in which only the strongest and most vicious survived and all the others died. In such a world, nothing is going to survive very long; once they've eaten all their prey, they'll turn around and eat each other. The writing in general has a somewhat hurried quality, as if Crichton just wanted to bang this sequel out and get it over with before moving on to something else. But even with its flaws, Crichton still knows how to engage the reader's attention. "The Lost World" doesn't measure up to its predecessor by a long shot, but it's still a pretty good read.
2.0 out of 5 stars
Should have stopped after Jurassic Park,
This review is from: The Lost World (Mass Market Paperback)
I'm disappointed. Why did Michael Crichton write this so-so book when could have written a real sequel to Jurassic Park? I kept waiting and waiting for something to happen in what is supposed to be a thriller. For most of the book, the main characters seem to stand around in the same spot watching herbivores in the distance. Eventually a handful of bad guys come onto the island and get eaten before anything interesting happens. The good guys have a couple of short run-ins and then they go home. No interest in the dinosaurs that are loose on the mainland. Lots of implausible scenarios, like when raptors roll a cage across the island (how???). A little girl learns contrived life lessons from her hero, as Crichton tells us outright instead of letting us notice for ourselves. Ian Malcolm is back from the dead (although injured again, and on morphine again), Ellie Sattler has changed her name to Sarah Harding, Tim has become black and Lex has become poor. No plot to speak of, no interesting new technology like in the prequel, no suspense that I could detect. Read this only if you're curious to know the sequel to Jurassic Park, so you can say that you've read it. I've lost interest in trying anything else by Michael Crichton now that I've read The Lost World.
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great adventure,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Lost World (Mass Market Paperback)
Although this book is excellent, I have to say that it is not as good as it's predecessor, maybe it's because we've read and heard the storyline before or the idea of creating dinosaurs has worn off, but either way it's still a good read. Once again, Crichton's opening argument to win over the audience and make them believe that Dinosaurs could've survived is totally believable. One of the biggest problems with the book, I thought, were the characters. I found it extremely difficult to actually like them. Apart from some minor problems, Crichton's 'The Lost World' is a worthy sequel to Jurassic Park, and I would suggest this book to any book-lover.
Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
Want to see more reviews on this item?
|
Most recent customer reviews |
|