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168 Reviews
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43 of 44 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Just try to defy 'Gravity'!,
This review is from: Gravity (Hardcover)
I just happened to pick this book up because I loved the cover. It also happened to have a blurb by my favorite author, Stephen King, across the front and I quote, "She is better than Palmer, better than Cook...yes, even better than Crichton." That's a pretty high recommendation, so those 2 factors encouraged me to read this book and boy, does it live up to the potential! Emma Watson, a brilliant research physician, has been training for the mission of a lifetime: studying life in outer space. Emma's ex-husband, Jack McCallum, has also shared her dream of space travel, but a unforeseen medical condition leaves him grounded and very bitter. He must watch Emma take the chance of a lifetime and watch her go into space without him. Once Emma reaches the space station, however, things begin to go wrong. An experiment runs deadly, stranding Emma aboard the station with no way to get home without threatening the Earth's population. The rescue attempts have all but failed, and one by one the astronants are dying...what happens next will amaze you! This is a fabulous read, nice and easy, but yet, keeps you on the edge of your seat. After reading Gravity, I went back and read Tess Gerritsen's other books. You will too, and you won't be disappointed
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
You CAN judge this book by its cover!,
By Josh (Wyoming) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gravity (Hardcover)
I'm one of those people who picked up this book because it just had too cool of a cover to pass up (that, and I'm a Robin Cook fan, so I was challenging King's cover quote). So, is Tess Gerritsen better than Cook? Hard to say; can't really compare the two. Tess leans more towards the sci-fi, while Cook sticks to terrestrial diseases. But, that doesn't make Gravity any less thrilling! This is one of the few books to actually give me the chills! Strong characters, vivid and graphic pictures of what exactly the crew members of the ISS are facing combined with superb research and writing skills make Gerritsen an author I'll be returning too. I eagerly look forward to reading her other books! Gravity is a roller-coaster of a read and one you won't soon forget.
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Fast-paced, Creepy & Extremely Well-Written,
By
This review is from: Gravity (Mass Market Paperback)
This is my second reading of my favorite Gerritsen book so far. Dr. Emma Watson is on the International Space Station doing scientific experiments when something goes terribly wrong. One of the crew is afflicted with stomach pains, vomiting and blood-red eyes. Soon, he's dead and his body seems to be liquifying before their very eyes. NASA is being told they have to abandon their astronauts; they have no clue what is happening to their crew members, so they can't allow it to come here and kill more people. But Jack McCallum, Emma's soon-to-be ex-husband, is back on earth trying to figure out what has gone wrong - and how to save Emma and the rest of the crew from dying from this strange disease that has somehow made it onto the space station. Where did it come from? How did it make it through all the security regulations for an ISS experiment?
I loved this book - it's fast paced, creepy, and extremely well-written!
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Unwelcome Guests,
By Marc Ruby™ "The Noh Hare™" (Warren, MI USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Gravity (Mass Market Paperback)
No environment contains as many medical threats as a space station. A small group of people living in close proximity, limited medical equipment, and a host of biological experiments always in process, all of this adds up to a high risk for infectious and deadly diseases. For this reason, incoming work is carefully screened for possible toxicity, and the team is trained in careful adherence to procedure. Yet the smallest of slips can spell disaster.When a tragic accident back on earth triggers a momentary slip on the station, something unexpected is let loose. Dr. Emma Watson arrives on the station to discover the first signs of an inexplicable infection that has horrific symptoms. Without good equipment, all she can do is try to ease the symptoms and wait for a miracle. Back on earth, her husband tries desperately to find the source of the disease and a way to treat it. But government authorities start directly interfering with NASA efforts and McCallum begins to suspect the problem is worse than a bad bug. Tess Gerritsen succeeds at the kind of medical thriller that is the Waterloo of writers with less capability. She has to balance a tremendous amount of science with the personal issues of men and women faced with a slow and ugly disease. Making everything seem real is a major challenge. Gerritsen was an internist before she took up writing and she has a knack for communicating medical details without stupefying the reader. In addition, she manages to master NASA speak well enough to convince this reader that her scenes were completely real. But Gerritsen really shines at steadily building suspense in the interweaving of the personalities of her characters. What her characters feel and think will complete engages the reader. From the relationship problems of Jack and Emma to the kind of government agents you love to hate, the author offers the reader countless opportunities to become involved. Gerritsen's flaw is her compulsion to make sure that all the clues are in place. While managing to keep the reader guessing, she withholds very little information. If the reader puts in all the effort required, it is possible to anticipate too many of the plot twists. The solution, of course, is to read it a bit faster and brace yourself for a rollercoaster ride. That should be no problem at all.
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
She got the NASA details right!!,
By NASA Engineer (Pearland, TX United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gravity (Mass Market Paperback)
I am an engineer at the Johnson Space Center in Houston. My Dad sent me this book because he recognized a couple of projects that I had worked on. I haven't been able to put it down! The amazing thing to me is the grasp that the author has on what goes on behind the scenes at NASA, and what would be going through the minds of flight controllers, directors, and the politics surrounding it all. So often NASA is not portrayed accurately, but this was right on the mark, even if the storyline was fictional. I am going to have to go out and buy all of her other novels now. She is such a fantastic author!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Michael Crichton, move over,
By
This review is from: Gravity (Mass Market Paperback)
For many years Andromeda Strain has been the benchmark novels about humans being invaded by alien substances. Not any more. Gerritsen's novel is Andromeda Strain raised to a power. It describes a creature that invades human hosts and literally becomes the host by bonding with the host's DNA. It is impossible to treat those who are infected with antibiotics or any other kind of "normal" medical amunition, since anything that will kill the organism will also kill the human host. As an additional complication, the whole thing takes place in the International Space Station (ISS), and all rescue attempts meet with devastating failure and additional loss of life. The characters are so real you feel that you've met them somewhere. I got the feeling as I was reading that everything was happening to ME. I became the characters, felt their pain, frustration, and sickness and had to read on to find out how I could be cured. Finally, Gerritsen's story is complete. No cop-out endings and no loose ends. When you close the book you breathe a huge sigh of relief. You don't have to wait for the next book to see how it ends. I can't wait for the movie.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Gravity-Lookout Palmer,Crichton and Cussler,
By Howard Spector (USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gravity (Hardcover)
I've read the other three books by Gerritsen;each of which was a page-turner,but this was the most exciting page-turner I've read! From page one to the last the story kept moving,holding one's interest and curiosity to keep on reading. At one point the story becomes so exciting and action-packed, I had to put the book down for the day. A "must read" for anyone into medical thrillers. So,when's the next one? I hope in the near future.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Must-Read for Medical Thriller Fans!!!,
By "indianakristin" (Porter, IN United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gravity (Mass Market Paperback)
Despite the fact I love Tess Gerrittsen's medical thrillers, I postponed buying this because the Astronaut/Space Mission theme did not appeal to me. I thought the NASA stuff would either bore me or get so technical I'd have trouble following the story.I'm thankful I bought it -- I loved it even more than Gerrittsen's books "Harvest" and "Bloodstream"! (Which is saying a lot because those books are both 5* in my opinion). She does such a commendable job explaining the tech. aspects (without going into too much detail) that you get a good feel for the shuttle layout & the tasks astronauts perform. Even if you are easily bored by tech. stuff or not mechanically inclined, you'll find "Gravity" captivating AND easy to follow! Gerrittsen paints such a vivid picture you feel you're there with the astronauts. Setting a medical thriller in deep space rachets up the suspense, increasing the tension several notches! Since the main character is a million miles from earth and surrounded by astronauts dying from an especially virulent and mysterious plague -- she has only herself to rely on. Once again, Gerritsen has created well-developed characters you care about. When the ending reveals the cause of the plague, you will marvel at Gerrittsen's ingenious plot and how easily everything falls into place! This is one of those books that once it's finished, you wish you could turn back time in order to relive the thrill of reading it the first time. A side note: The vast majority of Gerrittsen's books are romance novels (which I've never read) -- DO NOT let that dissuade you from reading her medical thrillers. If you're of the opinion most romance writers are lightweights who crank out formulaic feel-good fluff, don't be mistaken. Gerrittsen (who is an M.D.) possesses remarkable skill in the med. suspense genre. For years I've been a fan of Robin Cook's med. thrillers and I'd rank Gerrittsen above Cook. Her characters have greater depth than Cook's. You get to know the characters so well, you'll feel as those you live in the same house.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The guys need to be reading this one!,
By A Customer
This review is from: Gravity (Hardcover)
If you're a guy like me who likes to read Stephen Hunter or John Sandford or Michael Connelly, Baldacci is cool, Stephen King is still the king; liked Michael Crichton's AIRFRAME or SPHERE; maybe still hasn't given up on Clancy by the pound; maybe read some Michael Palmer or Robin Cook's COMA...but wouldn't read a book written by a WOMAN on a bet--c'mon guys, you know who you are--Well, it's time to rethink your thinking. The biggest problem you'll have with GRAVITY is that Doc Gerritsen's picture is on the inside back flap of the dust cover. And she's a petite, pretty woman with big dark eyes. This is one cool, hair-raising, blood-splattered, techno-packed, perfectly thought-provoking, deep sea to outer-space, technically-correct, stay-up-till-dawn read. You think you might see some "hairy-chested, bronzed muscled, quivering loins" sorta girl-book stuff? Nope. GRAVITY is as good a techno-thriller as has been written. You can't be seen reading a book by a woman? Gerritsen's tough-as-nails heroine Emma Watson would easily dismiss you: "You're all f**ked up!" Take a chance, guys. Sooner or later, you're gonna be a fan of Gerritsen.
6 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
A fast-paced, exciting read,
By Andrew (Vermont) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Gravity (Hardcover)
Gravity is a very fast, exciting read that combines science fiction, biology, NASA and some problems for the characters. In the story, a biological sample begins to infect the crew onboard the International Space Station. The victims have bloodshot eyes, muscle cramps, and then violently die, spreading the organism around to infect others. On the ground, a space shuttle crashes, and NASA is forced out of the picture by the military, who want to cover up the infection and protect the people on the ground. The surviving crew members are quarintined on the station, while infection eats them away, one by one. I found this to be a very dramatic read, with nice mixes of the Hot Zone, Cobra Event, Apollo 13 and Aliens. There is also quite a bit of science, which well supports what is going on in the story. Gerritsen's characters are really well written, with all of their problems and weaknesses. I also enjoyed the research parts, reminisent of the Hot Zone. However, this book did have some problems. The first people to die were the ones that weren't that interesting. Its as if they are just there to hold a place. Also in the book, everyone seemed to worry way too much about routine shuttle lift offs. This might go wrong, that might go wrong. The space shuttle is one of the most efficient machines around. Emma and her husband's relationship was pretty dry. Apart, they hated each other on the ground, while together, they seemed to be okay with each other, even though their relationship was shot and they hate each other. When Emma is up in space, her husband can't stop worrying about her. Lastly, I would have liked to see more of the Alien organism, after the first stage. Overall, not a bad read. Its hard to put down, but hardly above the avarage, or extraordinary. |
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Gravity by Tess Gerritsen (Audio Cassette - September 1, 2002)
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