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A review by angela42
Timeline by Michael Crichton
adventurous
mysterious
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? No
3.5
I listened to the audiobook, narrated by John Bedford Lloyd.
Switching between the past and present, this story follows a group of students as they travel back to medieval times (or technically to a parallel universe) to rescue their professor. This book delightfully has a race against the clock. A lot happens in the short timespan this book takes place in. Occassionally, I would need to take a moment to remember that hours are passing, not days.
Even though this book takes place in medieval times, there is of course also the part that takes place in the present, where Crichton gives detailed descriptions of the technology that is being used to send the students to medieval France. I think this might not appeal to all readers, but for me it is one of the things I like a lot about Crichton's writing.
The story takes quite some time to get to the meat of the story, but I didn't mind.
Overall, a very enjoyable Crichton adventure.
A note on the narration: occassionally words would be pronounced in a way that seemed weird to me. Most notably, the narrator mispronounces the name of the author (???) at the start of the audiobook. I also thought trebuchet was pronounced weirdly, but when I looked it up, I learnt that the t at the end of the word being pronounced is actually a pronunciation recognised by the OED.
Switching between the past and present, this story follows a group of students as they travel back to medieval times (or technically to a parallel universe) to rescue their professor. This book delightfully has a race against the clock. A lot happens in the short timespan this book takes place in. Occassionally, I would need to take a moment to remember that hours are passing, not days.
Even though this book takes place in medieval times, there is of course also the part that takes place in the present, where Crichton gives detailed descriptions of the technology that is being used to send the students to medieval France. I think this might not appeal to all readers, but for me it is one of the things I like a lot about Crichton's writing.
The story takes quite some time to get to the meat of the story, but I didn't mind.
Overall, a very enjoyable Crichton adventure.
A note on the narration: occassionally words would be pronounced in a way that seemed weird to me. Most notably, the narrator mispronounces the name of the author (???) at the start of the audiobook. I also thought trebuchet was pronounced weirdly, but when I looked it up, I learnt that the t at the end of the word being pronounced is actually a pronunciation recognised by the OED.
Graphic: Violence and Murder