Early life John Michael Crichton was born on October 23, 1942, in Chicago, Illinois, to John Henderson Crichton, a journalist, and Zula Miller Crichton, a homemaker. He was raised on
Long Island, in
Roslyn, New York, Crichton later recalled, "Roslyn was another world. Looking back, it's remarkable what wasn't going on. There was no terror. No fear of children being abused. No fear of random murder. No drug use we knew about. I walked to school. I rode my bike for miles and miles, to the movie on Main Street and piano lessons and the like. Kids had freedom. It wasn't such a dangerous world... We studied our butts off, and we got a tremendously good education there." Crichton had always planned on becoming a writer and began his studies at
Harvard University in 1960 as an English major. Crichton submitted an essay by
George Orwell under his own name. The paper was returned by his unwitting professor with a mark of "B−". He later said, "Now Orwell was a wonderful writer, and if a B-minus was all he could get, I thought I'd better drop English as my major." and was initiated into
Phi Beta Kappa society. Crichton later enrolled at
Harvard Medical School.
Odds On is a 215-page paperback novel which describes an attempted robbery at an isolated hotel on the
Costa Brava in Spain. The robbery is planned scientifically with the help of a
critical path analysis computer program, but unforeseen events get in the way. Crichton submitted it to Doubleday, where a reader liked it but felt it was not for the company. Doubleday passed it on to New American Library, which published it in 1966. Crichton used the pen name John Lange because he planned to become a doctor and did not want his patients to worry that he would use them for his plots. The name came from cultural anthropologist
Andrew Lang. Crichton added an "e" to the surname and substituted his own real first name, John, for Andrew. Film rights were sold in 1969, but no movie resulted. The second Lange novel,
Scratch One (1967), relates the story of Roger Carr, a handsome, charming, privileged man who practices law, more as a means to support his playboy lifestyle than a career. Carr is sent to
Nice, France, where he has notable political connections, but is mistaken for an assassin and finds his life in jeopardy. Crichton wrote the book while traveling through Europe on a travel fellowship. He visited the
Cannes Film Festival and
Monaco Grand Prix, and then decided, "any idiot should be able to write a
potboiler set in Cannes and Monaco", and wrote it in eleven days. He later described the book as "no good". Crichton's fourth novel was
A Case of Need (1968), a medical thriller. The novel had a different tone from the Lange books; accordingly, Crichton used the pen name "Jeffery Hudson", based on Sir
Jeffrey Hudson, a 17th-century dwarf in the court of
queen consort Henrietta Maria of England. The novel would prove a turning point in Crichton's future novels, in which technology is important in the subject matter, although this novel was as much about medical practice. The novel earned him an
Edgar Award in 1969. He intended to use the "Jeffery Hudson" pseudonym for other medical novels but ended up using it only once. The book was later adapted into the film
The Carey Treatment (1972).
Early novels and screenplays (1969–1974) 's
Slaughterhouse-Five (1969) in
The New Republic. Crichton says after he finished his third year of medical school: "I stopped believing that one day I'd love it and realized that what I loved was writing." In 1969, Crichton wrote a review for
The New Republic (as J. Michael Crichton), reviewing
Kurt Vonnegut's recently published
Slaughterhouse-Five. He also continued to write Lange novels:
Zero Cool (1969), dealt with an American radiologist on vacation in Spain who is caught in a murderous crossfire between rival gangs seeking a precious artifact.
The Venom Business (1969) relates the story of a smuggler who uses his exceptional skill as a snake handler to his advantage by importing snakes to be used by drug companies and universities for medical research. During his clinical rotations at the
Boston City Hospital, Crichton grew disenchanted with the culture there, which appeared to emphasize the interests and reputations of doctors over the interests of patients. He graduated from Harvard, obtaining an MD in 1969, and undertook a post-doctoral fellowship study at the
Salk Institute for Biological Studies in
La Jolla, California, from 1969 to 1970. He never obtained a
license to practice medicine, devoting himself to his writing career instead. Reflecting on his career in medicine years later, Crichton concluded that patients too often shunned responsibility for their own health, relying on doctors as miracle workers rather than advisors. He experimented with
astral projection,
aura viewing, and
clairvoyance, coming to believe that these included real phenomena that scientists had too eagerly dismissed as
paranormal.
Grave Descend earned him an Edgar Award nomination the following year. There was also
Dealing: or the Berkeley-to-Boston Forty-Brick Lost-Bag Blues written with his younger brother Douglas Crichton.
Dealing was written under the pen name "Michael Douglas", using their first names. Michael Crichton wrote it "completely from beginning to end". Then his brother rewrote it from beginning to end, and then Crichton rewrote it again. '', recounts his experiences of practices in the late 1960s at
Massachusetts General Hospital and the issues of costs and politics within American health care. Aside from fiction, Crichton wrote several other books based on medical or scientific themes, often based upon his own observations in his field of expertise. In 1970, he published
Five Patients, which recounts his experiences of hospital practices in the late 1960s at
Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston. The book follows each of five patients through their hospital experience and the context of their treatment, revealing inadequacies in the hospital institution at the time. The book relates the experiences of Ralph Orlando, a construction worker seriously injured in a scaffold collapse; John O'Connor, a middle-aged dispatcher suffering from fever that has reduced him to a delirious wreck; Peter Luchesi, a young man who severs his hand in an accident; Sylvia Thompson, an airline passenger who suffers chest pains; and Edith Murphy, a mother of three who is diagnosed with a life-threatening disease. In
Five Patients, Crichton examines a brief history of medicine up to 1969 to help place hospital culture and practice into context, and addresses the costs and politics of American healthcare. In 1974, he wrote a pilot script for a medical series, "
24 Hours", based on his book
Five Patients, however, networks were not enthusiastic. As a personal friend of the artist
Jasper Johns, Crichton compiled many of Johns' works in a
coffee table book, published as
Jasper Johns. It was originally published in 1970 by Harry N. Abrams, Inc. in association with the
Whitney Museum of American Art and again in January 1977, with a second revised edition published in 1994. The psychiatrist Janet Ross owned a copy of the painting
Numbers by Jasper Johns in Crichton's later novel
The Terminal Man. The
technophobic antagonist of the story found it odd that a person would paint numbers as they were inorganic. In 1972, Crichton published his last novel as John Lange:
Binary, relates the story of a villainous middle-class businessman, who attempts to assassinate the President of the United States by stealing an army shipment of the two precursor chemicals that form a deadly nerve agent.
The Terminal Man (1972), is about a
psychomotor epileptic sufferer, Harry Benson, who regularly suffers seizures followed by blackouts, and conducts himself inappropriately during seizures, waking up hours later with no knowledge of what he has done. Believed to be psychotic, he is investigated and electrodes are implanted in his brain. The book continued the preoccupation in Crichton's novels with machine-human interaction and technology. Crichton was hired to adapt his novel
The Terminal Man into a script by Warner Bros. The studio felt he had departed from the source material too much and had
another writer adapt it for the 1974 film. ABC TV wanted to buy the film rights to Crichton's novel
Binary. The author agreed on the provision that he could direct the film. ABC agreed provided someone other than Crichton write the script. The result,
Pursuit (1972) was a ratings success. Crichton then wrote and directed the 1973 low-budget science fiction western-thriller film
Westworld about robots that run amok, which was his feature film directorial debut. It was the first feature film using 2D
computer-generated imagery (CGI). The producer of
Westworld hired Crichton to write an original script, which became the erotic thriller
Extreme Close-Up (1973). Directed by
Jeannot Szwarc, the movie disappointed Crichton.
Period novels and directing (1975–1988) '' featured relict
Neanderthals as antagonists. In 1975, Crichton wrote
The Great Train Robbery, which would become a bestseller. The novel is a recreation of the
Great Gold Robbery of 1855, a massive gold heist, which takes place on a train traveling through
Victorian era England. A considerable portion of the book was set in London. Crichton had become aware of the story when lecturing at the
University of Cambridge. He later read the transcripts of the court trial and started researching the historical period. In 1976, Crichton published
Eaters of the Dead, a novel about a 10th-century Muslim who travels with a group of Vikings to their settlement.
Eaters of the Dead is narrated as a scientific commentary on an old manuscript and was inspired by two sources. The first three chapters retell
Ahmad ibn Fadlan's personal account of his journey north and his experiences in encountering the
Rus', a Varangian tribe, whilst the remainder is based upon the story of
Beowulf, culminating in battles with the 'mist-monsters', or 'wendol', a relict group of
Neanderthals. Crichton wrote and directed the suspense film
Coma (1978), adapted from the 1977 novel of the same name by
Robin Cook, a friend of his. There are other similarities in terms of genre and the fact that both Cook and Crichton had medical degrees, were of similar age, and wrote about similar subjects. The film was a popular success. Crichton then wrote and directed an adaptation of his own book,
The Great Train Robbery (1978), starring
Sean Connery and
Donald Sutherland. The film would go on to be nominated for Best Cinematography Award by the
British Society of Cinematographers, also garnering an
Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Motion Picture by the Mystery Writers Association of America. In 1979, it was announced that Crichton would direct a movie version of his novel
Eaters of the Dead for the newly formed
Orion Pictures. This did not occur. Crichton pitched the idea of a modern day ''
King Solomon's Mines to 20th Century Fox who paid him $1.5 million for the film rights to the novel, a screenplay and directorial fee for the movie, before a word had been written. He had never worked that way before, usually writing the book then selling it. He eventually managed to finish the book, titled Congo, which became a best seller. Crichton did the screenplay for Congo
after he wrote and directed Looker (1981). Eventually, a film version was made in 1995 by Frank Marshall. In 1984, Telarium released a graphic adventure based on Congo
. Because Crichton had sold all adaptation rights to the novel, he set the game, named Amazon, in South America, and Amy the gorilla became Paco the parrot. That year Crichton also wrote and directed Runaway'' (1984), a police thriller set in the near future which was a box office disappointment. Crichton had begun writing
Sphere in 1967 as a companion piece to
The Andromeda Strain. His initial storyline began with American scientists discovering a 300-year-old spaceship underwater with stenciled markings in English. However, Crichton later realized that he "didn't know where to go with it" and put off completing the book until a later date. The novel was published in 1987. It relates the story of psychologist Norman Johnson, who is required by the U.S. Navy to join a team of scientists assembled by the U.S. Government to examine an enormous alien spacecraft discovered on the bed of the Pacific Ocean, and believed to have been there for over 300 years. The novel begins as a science fiction story, but rapidly changes into a psychological thriller, ultimately exploring the nature of the human imagination. The novel was adapted into the
1998 film directed by
Barry Levinson and starring
Dustin Hoffman. Crichton worked—as a director only—on
Physical Evidence (1989), a thriller originally conceived as a sequel to
Jagged Edge. In 1988, Crichton was a visiting writer at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. A book of autobiographical writings,
Travels, was also published in 1988.
Jurassic Park and subsequent works (1989–1999) , Poland. In 1990, Crichton published the novel
Jurassic Park. Crichton used the presentation of "fiction as fact", of his previous novels,
Eaters of the Dead and
The Andromeda Strain. In addition,
chaos theory and its philosophical implications are used to explain the collapse of an
amusement park in a "biological preserve" on Isla Nublar, a fictional island to the west of Costa Rica. The novel had begun as a screenplay Crichton had written in 1983, about a graduate student who recreates a dinosaur. Reasoning that genetic research is expensive and that "there is no pressing need to create a dinosaur", Crichton concluded that it would emerge from a "desire to entertain", which led him to set the novel in a
wildlife park of extinct animals. The story had originally been told from the point of view of a child, but Crichton changed it because everyone who read the draft felt it would be better if told by an adult.
Steven Spielberg learned of the novel in October 1989 while he and Crichton were discussing a screenplay that would later be developed into the television series
ER. Before the book was published, Crichton demanded a non-negotiable fee of $1.5 million as well as a substantial percentage of the gross.
Warner Bros. and
Tim Burton,
Sony Pictures Entertainment and
Richard Donner, and
20th Century Fox and
Joe Dante bid for the rights, but Universal eventually acquired the rights in May 1990 for Spielberg. Universal paid Crichton a further $500,000 to adapt his own novel, which he had completed by the time Spielberg was filming
Hook. Crichton noted that, because the book was "fairly long", his script only had about 10% to 20% of the novel's content. The
film, directed by Spielberg, was released in 1993. In 1992, Crichton published the novel
Rising Sun, an internationally bestselling crime thriller about a murder in the Los Angeles headquarters of Nakamoto, a fictional Japanese corporation. The book was adapted into the
1993 film directed by
Philip Kaufman and starring
Sean Connery and
Wesley Snipes; it was released the same year as the adaptation of
Jurassic Park. The theme of his next novel,
Disclosure, published in 1994, was sexual harassment—a theme previously explored in his 1972 novel,
Binary.
Disclosure centers on sexual politics in the workplace, emphasizing an array of paradoxes in traditional gender roles by featuring a male protagonist who is being sexually harassed by a female executive. As a result, the book has been criticized harshly by some feminist commentators and accused of being anti-feminist. Crichton, anticipating this response, offered a rebuttal at the close of the novel which states that a "role-reversal" story uncovers aspects of the subject that would not be seen as easily with a female protagonist. The novel was made into a
film the same year, directed by
Barry Levinson and starring
Michael Douglas and
Demi Moore. Crichton was the creator and an executive producer of the television drama
ER, based on his 1974 pilot script
24 Hours. Spielberg helped develop the show, serving as an executive producer for season one and offering advice (he insisted on
Julianna Margulies becoming a regular, for example). It was also through Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment that
John Wells was attached as the show's executive producer. In 1995, Crichton published
The Lost World as a sequel to
Jurassic Park. The title was a reference to
Arthur Conan Doyle's
The Lost World (1912). It was made into the
1997 film two years later, again directed by Spielberg. In March 1994, Crichton said there would probably be a sequel novel as well as a film adaptation, stating that he had an idea for the novel's story. In 1996, Crichton published
Airframe, an aero-techno-thriller. The book continued Crichton's overall theme of the failure of humans in human-machine interaction, given that the plane worked perfectly and the accident would not have occurred had the pilot reacted properly. In 1999, Crichton published
Timeline, a science-fiction novel in which experts
time travel back to the medieval period. The novel, which continued Crichton's long history of combining technical details and action in his books, explores
quantum physics and time travel directly; it was also warmly received by medieval scholars, who praised his depiction of the challenges involved in researching the
Middle Ages. In 1999, Crichton founded Timeline Computer Entertainment with
David Smith. Although he signed a multi-title publishing deal with
Eidos Interactive, only one game,
Timeline, was ever published. Released by Eidos Interactive on November 10, 2000, for
Windows, the game received negative reviews. A
2003 film based on the book was directed by
Richard Donner and starring
Paul Walker,
Gerard Butler and
Frances O'Connor.
Eaters of the Dead was adapted into the 1999 film
The 13th Warrior directed by
John McTiernan, who was later removed, with Crichton himself taking over direction of reshoots.
Final novels and later life (2000–2008) In 2002, Crichton published
Prey, about developments in science and technology, specifically
nanotechnology. The novel explores relatively recent phenomena engendered by the work of the scientific community, such as:
artificial life,
emergence (and by extension,
complexity),
genetic algorithms, and
agent-based computing. In 2004, Crichton published
State of Fear, a novel concerning
eco-terrorists who attempt mass murder to support their views. The novel's central premise is that climate scientists exaggerate
global warming. A review in
Nature found the novel "likely to mislead the unwary". The novel had an initial print run of 1.5 million copies and reached the No. 1 bestseller position at
Amazon.com and No. 2 on
The New York Times Best Seller list for one week in January 2005. The last novel published during his lifetime was
Next in 2006. The novel follows many characters, including
transgenic animals, in a quest to survive in a world dominated by genetic research, corporate greed, and legal interventions, wherein government and private investors spend billions of dollars every year on genetic research. In 2006, Crichton clashed with journalist
Michael Crowley, a senior editor of the magazine
The New Republic. In March 2006, Crowley wrote a strongly critical review of
State of Fear, focusing on Crichton's stance on global warming. In the same year, Crichton published the novel
Next, which contains a minor character named "Mick Crowley", who is a Yale graduate and a Washington, D.C.–based political columnist. The character was portrayed as a child molester
with a small penis. The real Crowley, also a Yale graduate, alleged that by including a
similarly named character Crichton had libeled him.
Micro was completed by
Richard Preston using Crichton's notes and files, and was published in November 2011. It is a historical novel set during the
Bone Wars, and includes the real life characters of
Othniel Charles Marsh and
Edward Drinker Cope. The novel was released in May 2017. In addition, some of his published works are being continued by other authors. On February 26, 2019, Crichton's website and HarperCollins announced the publication of
The Andromeda Evolution, the sequel to
The Andromeda Strain, a collaboration with CrichtonSun LLC. and author
Daniel H. Wilson. It was released on November 12, 2019. In 2020, it was announced that his unpublished works will be adapted into TV series and films in collaboration with CrichtonSun and Range Media Partners. On December 15, 2022, it was announced that
James Patterson would coauthor a novel about a mega-eruption of Hawaii's Mauna Loa volcano, based on an unfinished manuscript by Crichton. The novel,
Eruption, was released on June 3, 2024. On May 5, 2026, a never before published novel written under the pseudonym John Lange called
A Murder In Hollywood is set to be released. Taking place in the 1970s, the novel follows the writer of the Western film Bloodrock, who is found dead in a motel bathtub. As publicist Harvey Jason struggles to keep the production on track, investigator Harlow Perkins begins uncovering the truth behind the death. ==Scientific and legal career==