I
recently uploaded Michael Crichton’s Micro on my Nook Book. I have always been, and am still, a fan of
Michael Crichton’s books. He surpasses
science fiction into the realm of science possibility.
Micro
is a monumental disappointment.
Crichton did not actually write the book. After his death the unfinished manuscript
was found on his computer and the book was written by Richard Preston. This book is filled with mathematic
impossibilities and unrealistic science that Crichton would have never
published.
The premise
of the book is that a group of graduate students are shrunk by a mad
scientist/business CEO, using strong magnetic fields, to one half an inch
tall.
These
tiny people find themselves released on a jungle trail about two miles from a
trailhead parking lot. They have four
days to get back to the parking lot and somehow steal away a ride back to the
facility that shrunk them, or they will die.
NOW FOR
SOME NERD SCIENCE
1. If a person is six-foot-tall, we can figure
his relationship to a mile in length:(rounding off numbers for ease.) It
would take ninety people, six feet tall, laying foot to head, to create a human
line one mile long. Therefore, we can
approximate that an equivalent mile in the tiny person world, where people are
½ inch long, to be 90 x ½ ; or forty fine inches. We will round that to four feet; so, in the
tiny world and equivalent mile is four feet.
2. The average person can walk approximately
three miles per hour; so, in the tiny world, half-inch people could walk 12
feet in one hour.
3. in the normal world two miles equals
approximately 10,500 feet.
4. If we divide 10,500 feet by 12 feet an hour
in the tiny world, we find that it would take the tiny grad students 875
walking hours to reach the parking lot – or 36.5 days non-stop. Remember, they only have four days to live.
INSULT
TO INJURY
After
two days of travel (possibly 250 feet), and avoiding, and falling prey, to
carnivorous insects, the students decide that the mad CEO has set a trap for
them at the parking lot; so instead they decide to climb a two thousand foot
sheer cliff to a supply depot on top of a mountain where tiny airplanes exist.
Remember, they are ½ inch tall, with only two days left until they die.
Crichton
would have never allowed this mathematical inconsistency to exist in one of his
novels.
Now the
story poses that the tiny people, being so lite in weight, can jump to numerous
times their own height, because their small size is less effected by earth’s
gravity.
If a
person that is six feet tall, which is 72 inches, shrinks down to ½ inch; they
are 1/144th. of their regular size. If that six-foot person weighed 144 pounds,
at ½ inch size he should weigh one pound.
A ½ inch object weighing one pound is not light enough to be unaffected
by gravity.
The
survival story in book is beyond ridiculous – these students should have been
dead within the first day.
This
book was not written by Michael Crichton.
When a person dies, they should end publishing books under his or her
name. It is not fair to their legacy.
My
favorite Crichton book is Eaters of the Dead. The movie, The Thirteenth Warrior, was
good, but the book is better: it is the story of a Neanderthal tribe that survived
extinction and terrorized Viking settlements in far northern Norway. This book is a great description of Viking
life.
Most
writers, like Stephen King, I would not hold to a scientific standard; but
Michael Crichton would hold himself to a higher scientific standard.
This is a good time to stay home and read; and a good time to share a review of books you have read, on line.
the Ol'Buzzard
This is a good time to stay home and read; and a good time to share a review of books you have read, on line.
the Ol'Buzzard
Thanks for the warning. I love Michael Crichton. It's sad that someone would ruin Crichton's reputation like this.
ReplyDeleteOuch! It definitely sounds like a PRESTON book..... NOT a CHRIGHTON book. I still think “Andromeda Strain” is my favorite of his many books.
ReplyDeletePipeTobacco
There was an earlier Crichton book 'they' published after his passing, said 'they' found it in his files. After buying it & reading it I could see why he left it in his files. I did learn a lesson, "one of the greats is gone" and putting his name on the cover does not equal a good story.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the heads up on this one!
Books left unfinished, unpolished and unpublished by their authors should remain so. They are never a success when "finished" by someone else.
ReplyDeleteI figured it out a little differently, but came up with the walking equivalent of about 105 miles per day they would have to cover. So the conclusion is essentially the same especially with all the other considerations you mentioned. It ain't gonna happen.
ReplyDelete