"The Terminal Man" is one of those rare instances of a book where my 3-star rating has very little hint of negative criticism attached to it, because nearly all of the negative things I could say about it simply due to the book's age or it being too short! I wanted to rate this one 4 stars, but find that hard because of how much it feels like it lacks in on-screen events.
But that said, "The Terminal Man" is still a very fun book. After over 2 years since reading "The Andromeda Strain" (boy does that make my zoomer-ass feel old), I had forgotten how quickly Crichton reads and how engrossing his plotting and ideas are - how addictive it is to read a Crichton novel because of how simple he is able to make complex topics come across. I had no idea what "The Terminal Man" was about before starting it. I just knew it was going to be my next Crichton read, so I was almost surprised to see him explore the ideas of neurotechnology. Doing a couple brief Google searches, there are people who seem to think neurotechnology wasn't even a thing for a couple decades after this book (like, the 80s or 90s), though it seems the 60s is a more accurate time. Which makes sense based on the dates and information provided in the expositional portions of the novel.
Now, in fairness, Michael Crichton always seemed to be ahead of his time as far as his scientific exploration and plotting therein, but this subject matter for a book published in the early 70s was almost whiplashy based on the lack of awareness and knowledge I have the era. I think I fall into feeling like technology wasn't advanced enough for this book to be about what it's about...but again, that's kind of Crichton's whole spiel.
I found the expositional material very interesting. Though Crichton's characters aren't exactly the deepest, they are deep enough, and they do quite well to set up the topics at hand. The neurotechnological aspects and the subject of the technology are intriguing and really drive the whole narrative. The plot itself and the tidbits of personal strife from the main few doctors is all handled quite well.
But on the "lacking" issue...well, not enough of the book is on screen. In my copy, this thing is only 200 pages, and I feel like it could've been anywhere from 25-50% longer without overstaying it's welcome. There are some elements that move the plot forward that I would've liked better foreshadowed early on; there are plenty of spaces of time that are not covered deeply enough - time skips, basically, where there could've been active participation on the cast's part; and it would've been nice to get a little more time for certain character's experiences to sink a bit deeper. The exhaustion for example over the last couple "days" of the story doesn't come across too well because Crichton doesn't spend enough time on it.
Very little of the material was bad, and what I would consider mediocre about "The Terminal Man" is merely to the degree that expansion of the novel could've fixed them without any issue at all. Well...I guess the cognitive dissonance that the technology and subject matter yielded in my brain was a little off-putting at times (and didn't age well in some cases), but that might be a personal problem more than anything. There's at least something to be said for the thematic material regarding mingling man and machine and even the simple overreliance on machines and computers...and Crichton was DEFINITELY ahead of his time on this front given that it would be 2-ish decades before home computers were becoming commonly popular or affordable and we probably didn't have any true collective notion of "AI" at the time of the book's writing. So yeah, my criticisms are very minor - negligible, even - in the grand scheme of things, and prove that Crichton was definitely on the right track with his work.
[EDIT: I forgot that I'm not huge on the status of the ending of this book - potentially my only TRUE insightful criticism...I definitely would've liked more resolution there.]
Like I said, I wanted to give this one 4 stars, because the story (combined with the surprising handling of the themes I just brought up) are pretty great, but there was just enough "empty space" so to speak throughout the book that I was left a bit wanting in the end.
But if there's anything I will never forget about "The Terminal Man", it's the déjà vu that it gave me. This book references some very specific material about, well, the p-terminal of the human brain that I had read about in "Infinite Jest" like 1 or maybe 2 days before. If you know the context from IJ, you know exactly what I'm saying. If you've only read this, recall the one guy came in wanting to get the chip for the sheer hedonistic pleasure of it, and again you know what I'm talking about. The fact I read that section in this book within 48 hours of reading it in "Infinite Jest" - especially when I started this one having no idea what it was about at all and having intended to start it much earlier (which would've still given me the déjà vu but backwards to be honest) - will never not be hilarious to me because I genuinely thought I was going crazy for a few hours until a friend confirmed my suspicions with a search in the "Infinite Jest" e-book.
It may seem like I didn't love "The Terminal Man" - and I guess I didn't *love* it overall - but I did enjoy my time thoroughly, and cannot wait to get to my next Crichton read soon...
...or at least, hopefully sooner than 2+ years from now.