Techno-thriller
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Techno-thrillers are a hybrid genre, drawing subject matter generally from spy thrillers, war novels, and science fiction. They include a disproportionate amount (relative to other genres) of technical detail on its subject matter; only science fiction tends towards a comparable level of supporting detail on the technical side. The inner workings of technology and the mechanics of various disciplines (espionage, martial arts, politics) are thoroughly explored, and the plot often turns on the particulars of that exploration. They are often criticised for overwhelming the human characters with machinery. Many often also belong to the airport novel genre.
Techno-thrillers tend to have a broad scope in the narrative, and can often be regarded as contemporary speculative fiction—world wars are a common topic—and techno-thrillers often overlap, as far as the genre goes, with near-future science fiction. To the extent that technology is now a dominant aspect of modern global culture, most modern thrillers are 'techno-thrillers', and the genre is somewhat diffuse.
Michael Crichton is often regarded as the grandfather of the genre, his 1969 novel The Andromeda Strain combining elements of rigorous, hard science fiction and detective fiction in a thriller context. Craig Thomas' 1977 Firefox is the father of the modern military techno-thriller, although it was firmly rooted in the Cold War spy thriller genre; Tom Clancy's The Hunt for Red October is also an important early military techno-thriller.
[edit] Significant techno-thriller authors and works
- Tom Clancy
- The Hunt for Red October — submarine technology, espionage
- Red Storm Rising — a (conventional) third world war fought in Europe between NATO and Warsaw Pact forces, military technology
- Rainbow Six — modern counter-terrorism operations
- Larry Bond
- Red Phoenix — the Korean war revisited from the point of view of an F-16 pilot.
- Vortex — a South African war that spreads to neighboring nations and ultimately involves Cuba and the United States.
- Cauldron — a French and German led European Confederation go to war with the US, Great Britain and several Eastern European countries over the Polish, Czech and others refusal to join the European Confederation.
- Patrick Robinson
- Nimitz Class — submarine technology
- Kilo Class — submarine technology, U.S. Navy SEALs
- H.M.S. Unseen
- U.S.S. Seawolf — submarine technology, espionage, U.S. Navy SEALs
- The Shark Mutiny
- Barracuda 945
- Scimitar SL-2
- Hunter Killer
- Dan Brown
- Angels and Demons — antimatter technology
- Deception Point — about a discovery of a meteorite with proof of extraterrestrial life, microbotics, weapons technologies
- Digital Fortress — computer technologies
- Eric L. Harry
- Arc Light — a third world war including a large-scale nuclear exchange and the limited use of chemical and biological weapons.
- Philip Kerr
- The Grid — architecture, smart-building technology, feng shui
- A Philosophical Investigation — speculative neuropathology, philosophy, gender and criminal investigation
- The Second Angel
- Michael Crichton
- The Andromeda Strain — plague
- Jurassic Park — cloning, dinosaurs
- Prey — nanotechnology
- State of Fear — eco-terrorism
- Timeline — quantum mechanics
- Next (novel) — genetic research
- James Phelan
- Clive Cussler
- James H. Cobb
- Caleb Carr
- Killing Time (set in mid-21st century)
- Ralph Peters
- Leonard Crane
- Ninth Day of Creation — biotechnology, germ warfare, protein folding
- Matthew Reilly