Micro (novel)

Micro

First edition cover
Author Michael Crichton
Richard Preston
Country United States
Language English
Genre Science fiction, Adventure, techno-thriller
Publisher HarperCollins
Publication date
November 22, 2011
Pages 424
ISBN 978-0-06-087302-8
Preceded by Pirate Latitudes
Followed by Dragon Teeth

Micro is a techno-thriller novel by Michael Crichton, published posthumously in 2011. Upon his death in 2008, an untitled, unfinished manuscript was found on his computer, which would become Micro and complete his two-book deal with publisher HarperCollins. HarperCollins chose science writer Richard Preston to complete the novel from Crichton's remaining notes and research, and it was finally published in 2011.[1][2] Micro is Crichton's second posthumous novel; Pirate Latitudes, a historical thriller, was also found on his computer and published posthumously in 2009.

Plot

The narrative begins with a private investigator named Marcos Rodriguez pulling up to a metal building located on the island of Oahu. The building is the main headquarters of Nanigen Micro-Technologies, a research company that specializes in discovering new types of medicine. Disguised as a security guard, Rodriguez enters the unattended building and begins searching the grounds for an unknown object. As he makes his way through the halls of the building, however, he begins to notice mysterious, ultra-fine cuts appearing on his body. Spooked, Rodriguez flees the building.

Shortly after leaving the Nanigen headquarters, Rodriguez makes his way to the office of his employer, Willy Fong. When he arrives, he notices another man, of Chinese descent, waiting in the office. Fong begins to question Rodriguez about his cuts, but before Rodriguez can explain, the Chinese man's throat is slit by an unseen force. Fong and Rodriguez barely have time to react before they are also killed. Their deaths are reported as a triple-suicide, and Lieutenant Dan Watanabe of the Honolulu Police Department is assigned to investigate the case.

In Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard graduate student Peter Jansen is collecting venom from a cobra for further experimentation. He is joined in the biology lab by six other graduate students: Rick Hutter, an ethnobotanist; Karen King, an arachnologist; Erika Moll, an entomologist and coleopterist; Amar Singh, a botanist; Jenny Linn, a biochemist studying pheromones; and Danny Minot, a doctoral student studying the linguistics of science. They are visited by the CEO of Nanigen, Vincent "Vin" Drake, along with his CFO, Alyson Bender, and Peter's brother Eric, who is a vice president at Nanigen. The seven students are recruited by Drake to work with him at a laboratory in Hawaii. Although they are at first reluctant, they all decide to take Drake's offer and fly out to Oahu.

The following morning, Peter receives vague text messages from Eric urging him not to come to Hawaii. Peter tries calling Eric, but gets no response. Shortly afterwards he is called by Bender, who informs Peter that Eric has been in a boating accident and is likely dead. Peter flies to Oahu and meets with Watanabe, who shows him a video of Eric scrambling around the deck of his boat before jumping overboard. Peter notices Bender in the video, observing the scene unfold without a hint of concern on her face.

With assistance from one of Hutter's friends, Peter hacks Nanigen's phone records and finds a cryptic exchange between Bender and Drake, which confirm his suspicions about Eric's death. He saves the conversation onto a drive and plans to play it out loud during the students' scheduled tour of Nanigen in order to expose Drake. When the tour commences, Peter sneaks away from the group to find a place to insert the drive, stealing a wireless microphone while doing so and hiding it in his shirt. However, Drake catches Peter and takes him into another room where he beats him. Drake confesses that he did set up Eric to be killed on the boat. He then realizes that Peter had a microphone hidden in his pocket and that the other graduate students heard everything.

Drake activates an emergency alarm and drags Peter into the room where the rest of the graduate students are waiting. He orders them to follow him, with Bender in tow. He leads them to the tensor generator, a machine that uses extreme magnetic fields to shrink anything, even living organisms. Drake rushes the seven students inside, along with the generator's operator, Jarel Kinsky (the only other person in the room) and shrinks them all down to half an inch in height. As the disoriented subjects adjust to their new micro-surroundings, Drake places them into a plastic bag and takes them into another room, where a snake is being held. He drops Peter inside the snake's tank and leaves.

Before the snake can eat Peter, the other students save him by using wasp pheromone to cover Peter's scent and spider thread to pull him out. Bender, knowing that Drake will not stop until the students are dead, hides them and Kinsky inside a paper bag. When Drake returns, she insists that they escaped and are hiding in the room. As Drake orders the room to be gassed, Bender leaves with the bag and drives to Nanigen's arboretum. However, Drake realizes that Bender has misled him and follows her there, where he confronts her about the bag. Bender admits that she hid the students, and Drake feigns understanding of her concerns before sending her into the forest to kill them. As she walks into the trees, however, King uses her knife to cut open the bag, causing everyone in the bag to fall out. Realizing Bender betrayed him after she admits helping the shrunken students escape, Drake kills her.

Drake shrinks two Nanigen security members, and tasks them to find and kill the students in the forest, if they haven't died already, claiming that the students were attempting industrial espionage. The students, though, adjust well to the micro-world, and utilize their scientific expertise to survive and outwit dangerous insects. Though the students suffer fatalities, they kill their assassins, steal their shrunken vehicle, and head for a Nanigen base from which they might fly back to the Tensor generator. Unknown to Drake, or anyone else, Eric, Peter's brother, is still alive and is searching for the graduate students.

The three remaining students reach the Tantalus Nanigen base, but find no miniature airplanes. They encounter a fugitive Ben Rourke, the inventor of the Tensor generator, and also hunted by Drake, who has managed to adapt and survive in the micro-world. He gives them urgent medical attention and offers them three miniature planes that he has repaired. He explains that he has learned to survive the "microbends", a fatal sickness that afflicts shrunken humans. A fellow student, Danny, betrays the group by contacting Drake and offering him Ben Rourke's "microbends" remedy in return for his safety. He steals a micro-plane to meet Drake but is killed when his plane is attacked by bats. The next morning, the students, now only two, escape from Rourke's base in the remaining planes as Drake torches the Tantalus base. They find Eric, who leads them back to Nanigen's headquarters.

Meanwhile, Nanigen's security chief confesses to the local police force that he is complicit in Nanigen's and Drake's crimes, and a police force is sent to Nanigen to arrest Drake. Eric and the students arrive at Nanigen first and encounter Drake, who activates micro-bots to attack Eric and a fight ensues. The two students finally re-enter the Tensor generator and return to full-size. A micro-bot that attempted to attack them is enlarged as well, to the size "of a refrigerator". In the fighting, Drake is trapped in the Tensor generator room and is attacked by his own micro-bots, as well as the enlarged micro-bot, while the full-size students rescue an injured Eric. After Drake is killed, the enlarged micro-bot destroys the room and Tensor generator. The police finally arrive.

The two surviving students fall in love. Karen plans to return to the micro-world, enraptured by the beauty and diversity of life.

Writing

Michael Crichton spoke about working on Micro in three interviews before his death. He described the project as "an adventure story like Jurassic Park. I'm enjoying myself," and said the novel "would be informative in a way that would be fun, and would give...some information about how our environment really is structured."[3]

The book includes a somewhat detailed sketch of the setting in which the story takes place, titled "The Pali". Near the base of the waterfall in the sketch, reads the small inscription "NUMQUAM OBLIVISCEMUR MICHAELIS CRICHTONIS", which translated from Latin, reads: "We shall never forget Michael Crichton".

Themes

Micro features typical Crichton themes and tropes: a fight for survival of man and technology versus nature, the complexity of nature and natural systems, that technology can be dangerous, and man's struggle to control nature and technology. The students, motivated by a childlike wonder at the natural world and a thirst for knowledge, contrast with Vin Drake and Nanigen, who view technology and nature as a resource to be harvested for wealth and power. This dichotomy pervades Crichton's work.

The scientific themes particular to Micro are the rich diversity of life contained in soil ecosystems, which is remarkably well-adapted to its environment, and the physics of being small, first explored by Leonardo da Vinci. In his unfinished preface, Crichton argues that the natural world cannot be understood vicariously through books, and that with first-hand experience, we would learn that the environment is complex and dynamic, and that it cannot be manipulated or controlled.

Film adaptation

On June 26, 2015, DreamWorks announced plans for a film adaptation of Micro. Frank Marshall will produce the film, while Sherri Crichton and Laurent Bouzereau will act as executive producers.[4] Steven Spielberg is developing the film with DreamWorks.[5]

References

  1. "Books and Movies," Michael Crichton: The Official Site. MichaelCrichton.com. 1997-2012, Constant C Productions.
  2. "Micro". Online Catalog Entry. HarperCollinsCatalogs.com. Fall 2011, Harper Collins.
  3. Warren, Marla E. (July 19, 2011). "What Michael Crichton said about Micro". MusingsOnMichaelCrichton.com.
  4. Kit, Borys (June 26, 2015). "DreamWorks Picks Up Michael Crichton's 'Micro'". The Hollywood Reporter. Retrieved June 26, 2015.
  5. Baker, Tom (June 27, 2015). "Steven Spielberg Developing Adaptation Of Michael Crichton's 'Micro'". ScreenRant. Retrieved June 28, 2015.
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