Sunday, March 30, 2008

(4)Symbolism

411-502 of PREY

This week I read the last section of PREY titled PREY, and finished the book.

In this last section of the book, Jack has just finished destroying a rogue colony of insect like machines, only to find that there is another colony that has infected his wife and boss that posses enough intelligence to have the intent of taking over the world. Jack manages to team up with some of his co-workers, formulates a plan for eradicating the second colony, and eventually does so, killing his wife and his boss, and blowing up the manufacturing plant in the process.

After further thought into what themes are present in crichtons writing, I have come to find that one of the most prominent themes is change. He uses drastic change in his writing as a tool to help give it the thrilling effect that it has. Crichton uses a lot of technology in his writing, which is a perfect base for the theme of change. Technology being as dynamic a thing as it is, is one of the most frequently changing things in the world today. Further the prominence of the types of technology used in Crichtons writing makes his writing all the more relevant to peoples lives. I think that I could write a paper with an argument to the effect that the relevance of the subject covered in Crichtons books is such that just the subject alone is grounds for calling him a great American Author. Michael Crichtons use of drastic change relevant to todays world makes him an important figure in the literary world.

In regards to symbolism in Michael Crichtons writing, I see a lot in reference to the change that he sees in the world, symbolized by drastic change in his writing that takes place with a technological backdrop. In Crichtons books, he often uses change with a despairing sense of un-predictability. I think that he sees this un-foreseeable type change often enough in a world where man kind fancy themselves to have figured everything out, to where he uses his books almost as a way to show people just how un-predictable a place the world can be.

Saturday, March 29, 2008

(3)Mid-winter Break

140-408 of PREY

Over mid-winter break I read The sections titled DESERT and NEST of PREY.

Beginning in the section titled DESERT, Crichton sets aside Jacks previous worry about his wife's possible dalliance with another, and focuses on a much more interesting and captivating section of the plot. In the section DESERT, Jack is asked by his Wife's business partner to act as a consultant for her company, and to help them fix problems with the quickly evolving insect like machines that they are manufacturing. Once Jack gets to the manufacturing plant, he is told that some of the machines have escaped into the wild, and have begun to reproduce, and kill off wildlife in the area. He is faced with the task of eradicating the machines before they evolve to the point of being a real threat the outside world. In the next section titled NEST, Jack is simply faced with the task of discovering the nest of the machines and destroying it so that they will stop reproducing, which he successfully does by the end of the section.

Thus far in the book we find that Crichton has done an amazing job at keeping the story very captivating by continuing with the amazingly descriptive writing that he had used before, but at this point adding a fascinating plot to accompany it. All of this makes Crichtons writing a spectacularly easy read, the likes of which I have only experienced in such books as the Harry Potter series, The Da vinci Code, and a very few others. At this point I have found that Crichtons writing resembles the type of plot and style that we see in the movies more than ever. I think that I may be able to write my paper on something to effect that Michael Crichtons writing is the first to bring the movies to literature. Literature has been molded to fit into cinema ever since the beginning of cinema, but Crichton is a pioneer in the field of bringing the style of cinema into literature. Part of what gives his writing this style is his heavy use of dialogue.
"Jack you've got to come back in.
I can't just yet.
Below seven knots, the swarms can move.
Okay...
Ricky: What do you mean, okay? Jesus, Jack, are you coming or not?"(328)

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

(2)Favorite Passage

Pages 1-140 of PREY

So far I have read the introduction and first segment of PREY titled HOME. So far in the book, all of the main characters have been introduced, including a man named Jack, the man who's perspective that we see all of this from. Thus far we are confronted with Jack being a stay at home father after losing his job, and having to deal with his own suspicions of his wife having an affair, as well as what he believes is a deteriorating marriage. From what I have read so far I think that I may well be able to argue Michael Crichtons importance simply from his ability to use descriptive writing to keep a reader captivated with an otherwise dull story. "... as I replayed the mornings conversation in my head, I felt uneasy for other reasons. A lot of her comments sounded like she was building a case against me. Laying it out methodically, step by step.
You are shutting me out, keeping me away from my children.
I am here, you just don't notice.
I'm a good mother, I balance a very demanding job with the needs of my family.
"(87-88)

He squinted at the desolate landscape and shook his head. "How long you been out here?"
"About sixty cases," Grant said. When Morris looked surprised, he explained, "we measure time in beer. We start in June with a hundred cases. We've gone through about sixty so far." (Jurassic Park 33)

As we can clearly see in the above passage, one thing that Michael Crichtons writing is not with out is humor. He is quite good at taking very funny seemingly unrealistic circumstances and weaving them seamlessly into the plot of a story without making the reader think twice. He does not often use humor, and from what I have seen never uses it once he gets into the thick of a story, but occasions to use it in the beginning of a story to keep readers interested. His usual style of writing involves copious quantities of description that build very powerful settings for readers. This I believe is due in part to the fact that Crichton is not only a writer, but a director as well. This at times makes his books seem almost like movie scripts, as if they were written with the intention of being turned into movies.

Friday, February 1, 2008

(1)American Author Proposal

Michael Crichton
A man who brought innovation to publication
The main thing that draws me to Michael Crichton is his unique style of writing that I personally have never previously taken any interest in. Crichton writes in a mix of genre’s combining Action, Science Fiction, and the one that distinguished his books setting them apart from most other writers, Techno-thriller. He uses beautifully descriptive writing to create imaginative other worlds that easily accommodate the intricate plots and thrilling plot twists that his writing is so characterized by. It is this original and distinctive style that draws me to his writing, and is the reason for my choosing him as my American Author.
In regards to the criteria required of our selected author, I see no problem in Michael Crichton meeting all of the listed requirements. For starters Crichton is most definitely an American having been born in Chicago Illinois in the October of 1942, and lived in the United States all of his life. He has written well over twenty novels in his forty odd years of writing, many of which were made into major motion pictures. He has also written several non-fiction science based books, including a semi-autobiographical piece called Travels. The influence that technology has had in his life is present in all of his works not excluding the non-fiction pieces. It is the use of technology in his books that makes Crichtons works an important piece in the modern day development of literature. I plan to primarily use his pioneering use of modern technology in the thriller genre to argue his importance as an American Author.
Crichtons heavy use of technology coupled with his unique writing style give his writing a futuristic feel that would make for quite an intricate literary analysis. I plan to argue that his use of technology accompanied by the popularity of his books brought modern technology to the mainstream literary world. His broad base of books written over the long period of his career as a writer will allow me to show how his writing has developed and changed right alongside the change and development of technology. These changes and development of his writing will allow me to draw the lines between the effect of technology on his writing, and concurrently the affect that his writing has on the literary world. Arguing the importance of the connecting lines will be my primary approach in proving the influence that he holds and his overall importance as a writer in literature today.
As for the books that I plan on reading, I have chose to read three to four of his more famous fictional novels, as well as one containing autobiographical content. The first of his books that I plan to read is Prey. Published in 2002 it is one of his more current works, and one that I can more easily concern with todays technology that I am so familiar with. After this I will work my way backwards by date of publishing to Jurassic Park, followed by The Great Train Robbery, Binary, his semi-autobiographical book Travels, and then given enough time his first book Odds On. The logic behind this backwards progression is that I will begin reading books that I may more easily relate to and understand the technological aspect of; Then as I become more apt to looking for connections of or relating to technology, I can more throughly analyze his earlier works where the technological aspects of his writing are not as clearly apparent.