In the South Pacific, 1,000 feet beneath the surface, a spaceship rests on the ocean floor--a spaceship at least 300 years old
Rushed to the scene are four scientists: an astrophysicist, a biologist, a mathematician and a psychologist. Together they descend into the depths of the sea to investigate this astonishing find, to search for answers.
Has it come from an alien culture? From a different universe? From the future? What happened to the crew and what is the giant silver sphere of alien construction that they find inside the ship?
The riddle seems unsolvable. The someone or something begins to transmit messages onto their computer screen: messages that grow increasingly hostile, hinting at a terrifying power that threatens to destroy their underwater habitat and their very lives...
SPHERE is Michael Crichton at the top of his form. An astounding combination of action, suspense and science that probes the darkest …
In the South Pacific, 1,000 feet beneath the surface, a spaceship rests on the ocean floor--a spaceship at least 300 years old
Rushed to the scene are four scientists: an astrophysicist, a biologist, a mathematician and a psychologist. Together they descend into the depths of the sea to investigate this astonishing find, to search for answers.
Has it come from an alien culture? From a different universe? From the future? What happened to the crew and what is the giant silver sphere of alien construction that they find inside the ship?
The riddle seems unsolvable. The someone or something begins to transmit messages onto their computer screen: messages that grow increasingly hostile, hinting at a terrifying power that threatens to destroy their underwater habitat and their very lives...
SPHERE is Michael Crichton at the top of his form. An astounding combination of action, suspense and science that probes the darkest corners of the mind where man's deadliest enemy lurks.
--back cover
This is my fourth Michael Chrichton book, and I am beginning to understand the template. An expert in his field, pulled away to an isolated location, where humans are meddling with forces beyond their full understanding. The under water setting was unnerving. It worked. I turned the pages.
I wouldn't call this book terrible, but it is quite unexciting. The plot has holes the size of an alien sphere and while the premise has potential, that potential is basically wasted in a ho-hum development.
Which brings me to the execution. This is the first novel by Mr. Crichton I've read so far (cue in the "Shame!" scene from the Game of Thrones) and I cannot claim I've become his fan. Writing is dull and not engaging, with clichés abound, the vocabulary and dialogues rather simplistic, and the characters one-dimensional.
Overall, I don't feel the time spent on the book was a total waste but I cannot really recommend it.
This book starts with a team of 5 being brought together by the US Navy to investigate a spaceship discovered on the ocean floor — that has apparently been there for 300 years. They go down underwater to investigate, staying in a habitat on the seafloor. But as they stay down there, they may find that the greatest danger is not the ship, but each other.
Can't help comparing this to [b:The Andromeda Strain|7670|The Andromeda Strain (Andromeda, #1)|Michael Crichton|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1587497243l/7670.SY75.jpg|997271], so here goes...
Better: Feels more cinematic & technobabble delivery is smoother Cast of characters is more diverse I like the psychological approach to the first contact
Worse: Characters behave unprofessionally to the point of becoming unbelievable There's a focus on characters' behavior, but Crichton falls short in this Diverse characters end up very stereotypical