Books: Utopia Lobby  |  FAQ  |  Feedback  |  Today In History  | 

Books   e-Books   Music   Video   DVD   Computers   Camera/Photo   Electronics   Games   Toys   Housewares   Tools/Hardware   Outdoor Living   Software   For Dogs   Free Software Aisle   Worth Keeping  

The Periodical Stand   Fantastic Audio Books   The Baby Place   The Ideal Gift Store   CellPhone AddOns   Jewelry   Video Crossroads   eBook Universe   Top Line Software   Great Jokes And Gags   The Maple Book Corner   The Better Toy!   True Book Corner   The Sound Station  




 
Return To Prev Page

 Books: Utopia
by Lincoln Child

Click To See More Info
Click Image For More Info

Buy Now!

Click HERE for ...

  • Prices (new/used)
  • Availability
  • Additional Images
  • Similar Links
  • More Reviews
  • Additional Information

  • Hardcover: 400 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.41 x 8.98 x 6.92
  • Publisher: Doubleday; (December 24, 2002)
  • In-Print Editions: Audio Cassette (Abridged), Audio CD (Unabridged), Audio Download (Audible.com) |All Editions

Customers who bought this book also bought:
Review

Amazon.com
It takes a lot of chutzpah to give your novel the same title as one of the most famous novels in the history of English-language literature, even if the original novel didn't spawn a literary field or two (utopian and dystopian fiction) or become an everyday term for the perfect place to live on Earth. Yet there's a postmodern appropriateness to applying the title Utopia to a novel set in a theme park that uses cutting-edge technology to create Earth's most desirable fantasy place to visit. Like Westworld and Jurassic Park, Lincoln Child's Utopia is a near-future theme-park thriller, and like Michael Crichton, Child delivers an abundance of white-knuckle thrills, chills, and shocks.

Despite its remote location in the Nevada desert, the Utopia theme park receives 65,000 visitors daily. They never dream their lives may be in any real danger. However, some of the self-programming robots are becoming erratic, so park administrators quietly bring the robots' brilliant creator from the East Coast to fix the problem before it gets any worse. Dr. Andrew Warne brings his daughter, for he doesn't believe there is anything wrong with his creations. But on the day of their arrival, a mysterious band of ruthless criminals infiltrates not only the park, but its computerized systems. The unknown terrorists appear to control everything, from the simplest robot to the most dangerous ride. And if their demands aren't met, thousands of innocent park-goers will be killed. --Cynthia Ward

More Reviews