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Friday, January 29, 2016

Jurassic Park by Michael Creighton


Most people today know about the movie Jurassic Park. But what some people don’t know is that the very popular movie was based off a science fiction novel written a few years before that movie, by Michael Creighton. The movie is definitely more action packed than the book, the book has more explanation of the science involved in Jurassic Park, along with in depth descriptions of the dinosaurs, which so much detail it makes you think it’s real. But all in all, all these details about the science and dinosaurs came from Michael Creighton, not facts researched in science, which is what I think is so cool about this book.

In this story, we get a much longer version of the story, since obviously the movie had to cut a bunch of the book out in order for it to be a decent length. I will say, I wouldn’t call Jurassic Park one full length story with one main hero character, which is what I do like very much about it. There’s all these different little subplots going on, but I would say the main plot is basically how the T-Rex has escaped and is now running free around the island killing everything. If I were to sum it up in a sentence. 

But basically, to start off the novel, there’s a little subplot about mini dinosaurs that everyone thinks are lizards attacking children on Costa Rica. That is where Alan Grant comes in, because when a carcass is sent to a lab, it is thought be a dinosaur. Since Alan is a leading paleontologist, he observes the carcass and is shocked to see that it is in fact a dinosaur. He and his partner Ellie are flown to Isla Nublar, where the Jurassic Park has been built by millionaire John Hammond. 

These people on Isla Nublar have basically found out a way to clone dinosaurs by using DNA from the blood of mosquitos from millions of years ago, along with insert of amphibian DNA. It is later explained why amphibian DNA was a terrible decision to use as a substitute, due to its properties of changing gender of the animal. 

Hammond’s lawyer Gennaro and Ian Malcolm, a mathematician that is a consultant for InGen, the company that built the park, are both very skeptical about the park and think it will fail. Obviously, this is late proven correct due to all the chaos that goes on and all the people that are killed. Lex and Tim, Hammond’s grandchildren, are also present on the island for a tour of the island. What a terrible weekend trip, am I right? 

But what all these people don’t know is that Dennis Nedry, the man who controls all the automated technology on the island, has been paid by a rival company to steal embryos of the dinosaurs. He is unsuccessful with this attempt, after getting lost on the way to the docks and getting killed by a venom spitting dinosaur. 

And while the dinosaurs are rampaging, and the security systems are off, and Nedry is trying to steal the embryos, there is a huge tropical storm going on, and the rain is coming down in buckets.
Eventually, after quite a few people have been killed, and Lex, Alan, Tim, Ellie and few others have come very close to death, they manage to make it back to the control room. Nobody alive knows how the system works, however, so Tim, being the computer wiz he is, figures out the system and manages to turn it back on. He then calls the ship that has left and it comes back for them. Hammond, Alan, Gennaro and another man Muldoon venture out to find the raptor nests, and Hammond falls into a ravine and is killed by smaller dinosaurs. Ian Malcolm dies from his injuries from earlier…or does he?

The rest of the group make it back to the ship and leave the island, and obviously, the kids always live. 

I love this book. It’s written very formally and detailed, so it’s not like being told a story from a person like some other books are. It’s told in omniscient 3rd person, so it’s following the thoughts of many of the characters throughout the book.

While I do like this book, I don’t think there was any deep meaning intended by the book, but I think what we can take from this book is that we don’t mess with nature, and stop trying to bring back extinct species, nothing good happens when we bring back extinct species. 

All in all, it was a very enjoyable read, and it is on the longer and more complex side so I wouldn’t call it a sit down read where you read it in a few hours, but it is still a great book to read.

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