The Lost World (Michael Crichton)

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The Lost World
Original hardcover of The Lost World
Author Michael Crichton
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Science Fiction, Techno-thriller Novel
Publisher Ballantine Books
Released September 1995
Media Type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Audio
Pages 416 pp (first edition, hardback)
ISBN ISBN 0-679-41946-2 (first edition, hardback)
Preceded by Jurassic Park

The Lost World is a novel by Michael Crichton, published in 1995 by Ballantine Books. A paperback edition (ISBN 0-345-40288-X) was issued in New York in 1996. It is a sequel to his earlier novel Jurassic Park.

Like Arthur Conan Doyle's novel of the same name, Crichton's novel concerns an expedition to an isolated Central American location where dinosaurs roam - though in this case, the dinosaurs were recreated by genetic engineering, rather than surviving from antiquity.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The eccentric mathematician Ian Malcolm and the egocentric paleontologist Richard Levine head to Isla Sorna to investigate extinction theories in the "Lost World" left by InGen's cloning program. They are joined by material engineer Jack 'Doc' Thorne, Thorne's chief mechanic Eddie Carr, field biologist Sarah Harding, and two stowaway kids: R.B. "Arby" Benton and Kelly Curtis. Also on the island is Biosyn geneticist and the book's antagonist Lewis Dodgson and his two henchmen, Howard King and George Baselton.

As with the first book, the characters have to fend off attacks from T. rexes and Velociraptors, as well as carnotaurs, which are described as having chameleon like physical traits. Between the action scenes Malcolm and Levine talk about various evolutionary and extinction theories, as well as the nature of modern science and the homogenizing and destructive nature of humanity. The book also discusses the role of prions in brain diseases, which has been at the root of concerns over Mad Cow Disease.

[edit] Differences between the movie and the novel

The 1997 film's plot differs significantly from the novel.

  • Ian Malcolm still suffers greatly from his wound in the first book and film, though in The Lost World film adaptation, he suffers little pain from the wound. Ian actually died at the end of the first novel.
  • In the movie there is no burning of the dinosaur carcass on the beach
  • The characters of Doc Thorne, Lewis Dodgson, Howard King, George Baselton, R.B. Benton and Dr. Levine do not appear in the film. The Main Antagonist of Lewis Dodgson is replaced with Peter Ludlow, the 'know-all' figure of George Basleton is replaced by Robert Burke, and the henchman of Howard King is overtaken by Dieter Stark.
  • The "Great White Hunter" figure of Roland Tembo from the film has no real equivalent in the novel.
  • Five people arrive on the island along with the trailer and Ford Explorer: Malcolm, Doc Thorne, Eddie Carr, Kelly Curtis and R. B. Benton. Sarah Harding arrives later with Dodgson, King, and Baselton. In the film, Malcolm, Harding, Carr, Nick Van Owen and Kelly arrive. The second team consists of Roland Tembo, Peter Ludlow, Ajay Sidhu, Robert Burke, Dieter Stark, and the rest of a rather extensive InGen team.
  • In the novel, Dr. Levine is the first person on Is. Sorna that Dr. Malcom's team goes to rescue - in the movie it is Sarah Harding.
  • In the novel, the character of Eddie Carr was much younger than that in the film.
  • In the novel, the characters of Roland Tembo, Peter Ludlow and the rest of the InGen team do not appear.
  • In the novel, John Hammond's company, InGen, has gone bankrupt and does not play a pivotal role, whereas in the film, it does.
  • In the novel, John Hammond is dead, having died in the previous novel, Jurassic Park.
  • In the novel, there were several infant Tyrannosaurs.
  • In the novel, only one of two of the trailers fall over the cliff, but doesn't explode.
  • The novel does not feature an adult Tyrannosaurus rex rampaging in San Diego.
  • Malcolm does not have any children in the novel.
  • Alan Grant, Ellen Sattler, Dennis Nedry, Donald Gennaro and Robert Muldoon are mentioned in the novel, but not the film (however, Genarro and Muldoon are mentioned in one of deleted scenes).
  • The novel also mentions that Jurassic Park was destroyed along with all of the dinosaurs, though in the film, the park's fate is never mentioned (in a deleted scene on the DVD it was briefly explained that the Jurassic Park Facility was dismantled and that the dinosaurs were destroyed in a hurricane).
  • In the novel, Site B's location took several days to discover, whereas in the film, its location is already known.
  • In the novel, the team investigates InGen's main research facility containing a vast laboratory and offices. The film only features InGen's Operations Center, however, the laboratory is featured in Jurassic Park III.
  • In the novel, Eddie Carr is not killed by two Tyrannosaurs, instead he is killed by a group of Velociraptors.
  • At the conclusion of the novel, all of the dinosaurs are fated to die off due to the uncontrolled spread of prions (the result of using ground up lamb as dinosaur feed). In the movie, Hammond turns the island into a preserve so that the dinosaurs can live free of human interference.

[edit] Dinosaurs Featured in the Novel

[edit] Trivia

[edit] External links


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