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- <text id=94TT0021>
- <title>
- Jan. 10, 1994: The Arts & Media:Profile
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Jan. 10, 1994 Las Vegas:The New All-American City
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- THE ARTS & MEDIA, Page 52
- Profile
- Pop Fiction's Prime Provocateur
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Seize the day's subject is the megabuck rule Michael Crichton
- follows, so his new novel puts a reverse twist on sexual harrassment
- </p>
- <p>By Gregory Jaynes
- </p>
- <p> In a blue-gray bungalow on a lamppost-lined street in an unremarkable
- American neighborhood, squirms a man of sudden celebrity, Michael
- Crichton. The year just done was "pretty amazing," he says.
- The reason is that one book of his, Jurassic Park, became the
- biggest hit in movie history, and another, Rising Sun, was no
- slouch, and together they vaulted old writings even he had dismissed
- back onto bookshop shelves, where they became the stuff of authors'
- dreams: they were bought, not remaindered. There are 100 million
- copies of Crichton's books now in print.
- </p>
- <p> "I'm still not accustomed to being recognized the way I am,"
- he says. "It's nice, but I'm accustomed to not being noticed--except by people who notice that I'm tall." Indeed, he has
- to duck to get under his own door. He is 6 ft. 9 in. You fear
- that if he fell down he would be out of town.
- </p>
- <p> This week Crichton, 51, is publishing his 24th book, Disclosure
- (Knopf; $24; first printing: 750,000 copies). It is about sexual
- harassment; a female executive virtually manhandles a subordinate.
- The woman, scorned, ignores the facts and charges the man with
- stepping over the line. He fights back. Crichton says he got
- the idea from a friend, presumably male, who told him about
- an incident in the workplace. That was the seed, and then Crichton
- cogitated, watered it as you would a Ficus, which seems to be
- his method. The result is provocative, which seems to be his
- pattern. To read it in this charged climate makes a man want
- to holler, "Slap leather, boys, and head for that line of trees!"
- Acknowledges Crichton: "It has been suggested that now is the
- time for that long-postponed trip to the Australian outback."
- Instead he is bracing for the criticism that trails his books
- like gulls after a trawler.
- </p>
- <p> The new novel was written in the tidy bungalow in Santa Monica,
- California. Crichton uses the place as an office; his home,
- his wife (the fourth) and his child (the first) are a mile and
- a half away. In his office sits the author, a student, a thinker,
- possessed of restless intelligence. He is the only person this
- person has ever interviewed whose answer to a question was "I
- don't know." That's inspired.
- </p>
- <p> To catch a sense of Crichton, one must summon other failed physicians
- who turned to fiction, though failed, perhaps, is the wrong
- word. Conan Doyle. More recently, Walker Percy. In The Moviegoer,
- Percy wrote of "the search." What's the search? Well, you poke
- about the neighborhood and don't miss a trick. Somehow, it all
- has to do with novelists trained in the field of science, men
- like Crichton who found science too unimaginative.
- </p>
- <p> In the '60s he went to Harvard Medical School and swiftly became
- disillusioned. "I hated it, he says. "I'd go to the shrink,
- and he'd tell me that everybody hated it. Why? Well, you went
- through it to get your license. There was nothing to discuss.
- You went through the hazing to join the fraternity--it was
- male-dominated in those days."
- </p>
- <p> Regrets?
- </p>
- <p> "No regrets. Early on, it gave me something to write about,
- an area of expertise that I could draw upon, a fund of experience
- and a sense of pace. Things happen fast. I still think it's
- true that any sense of narrative pacing on my part comes out
- of the emergency room. We don't get to know anybody well, and
- it's time to move on." He laughs at himself; he has been criticized
- for characters who have the depth of dust-bowl topsoil. The
- discipline of medicine fit his perception of himself, but the
- politics--a collegial judgment call by his superiors for what
- he felt was a needless series of operations, say, or, in those
- days, the rigid abortion restrictions--drew him up cold. He
- had a tetchy stomach that gave him the tendency to faint.
- </p>
- <p> So he concluded, Physician, wheel thyself. And drove away from
- such a future, in 1970. "To quit medicine to become a writer
- struck most people like quitting the Supreme Court to become
- a bail bondsman," he wrote. But this was disingenuous. He had
- already published 10 thrillers. By the time The Andromeda Strain
- reached the screen in 1972, he was writing screenplays and other
- novels, and about to start a career as a film director (Coma,
- The Great Train Robbery, Runaway). It was natural for him, Crichton
- says. He knew the works of Hitchcock before he knew the works
- of Dickens.
- </p>
- <p> John Michael Crichton grew up in a suburb of New York City,
- on Long Island, one of four children of an advertising-magazine
- executive and a homemaker. The parents encouraged the children
- to find nothing intellectually daunting. The theater, movies
- and museums were a large part of their lives. Crichton sold
- his first story, a travel piece, to the New York Times when
- he was 14. He entered Harvard as an English major, intending
- to become a writer, but after his compositions were adjudged
- underwhelming, he switched to anthropology. "The English department
- was not the place for an aspiring writer," he says. "It was
- the place for an aspiring English professor."
- </p>
- <p> After graduating with honors in 1964, ever precocious, he lectured
- on anthropology for a year at Cambridge University in England.
- Then came medical school and the incredible events that followed.
- In the past 18 months, in just the U.S., Crichton has sold 30
- million books. His popularity seems to spring from his ability
- to marry his vast appetite for science and its frontiers to
- humans caught in perilous situations--all told in a driving
- narrative that fairly whispers, "...and then...and then..." Jurassic Park, for one, has sold 9 million copies.
- </p>
- <p> Yet, as seems to be the way of it with many people of protean
- interests (his passions range from computers, about which he
- wrote a book, to Jasper Johns, about whom he wrote a book) and
- prodigious success, personal happiness does not always attend.
- There was a period, in the late '70s and early '80s, when Crichton
- was blocked. "Writing was very difficult for me." He leans toward
- his interlocutor conspiratorially. "You know, Olivier got stage
- fright when he was 65. It lasted about five years and then vanished.
- I did everything I could think of to do. Nothing seemed to much
- matter."
- </p>
- <p> For years Crichton responded by traveling like a tramp, the
- anthropologist in him exploring exotic cultures hard to reach.
- From Malaysia to Pakistan to an ascent of Kilimanjaro to a descent
- with South Pacific sharks, literally, he roamed. Along the way
- he was a spiritual pilgrim as well, exploring psychic phenomena
- the scientist within him assessed carefully but many times failed
- to discredit. He says he bent spoons, visited a past gladiatorial
- life in Rome, had his aura fluffed as you would a poodle. Once,
- he found himself in the desert conversing with a cactus, which
- he insulted, only to feel contrite.
- </p>
- <p> "Will you forgive me?" Crichton asked the cactus. "No answer.
- Hardball from the cactus."
- </p>
- <p> Skeptical? So was Crichton. "Sometimes I thought, `You've been
- in California too long, and you've gone from a perfectly O.K.
- doctor to a guy who lies on a couch while somebody puts crystals
- on him and you actually think it means something, but it's nothing
- but a lot of hippie-dippy-airy-fairy baloney. New Age Garbage,
- Aquarian Abracadabra, Karmic Crap. Get out now, Michael, before
- you start to believe this stuff.' But the thing is, I was having
- a really interesting time."
- </p>
- <p> He explored the landscape of the mind, or consciousness, as
- he explored the physical landscape of the planet. And then...for whatever reason, by 1985 Crichton was back working;
- by 1987 he was into his most solidly satisfying marriage (to
- Anne-Marie Martin); by 1988 he was a deliriously happy father
- (her name is Taylor); and by 1993 the money he was earning by
- his wits rolled up in 18-wheelers (the film rights to Disclosure
- went for $3.5 million).
- </p>
- <p> The new book may turn out to be his most provocative yet. Asked
- if provocation is his intent, he laughs. "I don't really enjoy
- it. I feel I am caught up in something, and I am made to do
- it." He knows he will be attacked and will find it extremely
- unpleasant, as he did with Rising Sun, and he will come away
- feeling that an honest attempt to educate and entertain on a
- complicated topic has been given a simplistic reading. He still
- picks at the abrasions from the Japan-bashing charges Rising
- Sun raised.
- </p>
- <p> "I'm a clean look in any given area, and I'm a single look,"
- he says. "I won't be making the issue my life's work. I'm not
- going to be making future sources of funding angry. I can walk
- in the door and say what I see in the room and walk out. That's
- what I do. I tell the truth. I believe very strongly in equality
- for women, and there's only one way to get it. Egalitarian feminism
- is the only way. That's the story. Egalitarian feminism says
- equality of opportunity and pay, period. That's it. People say
- women have special problems. Well, men have special problems.
- I'm very tall. That's a special problem." Here Crichton is arguing,
- as his book does, against any "special protection" for women.
- "Equality is clear. No favoritism is clear. If you say, `No
- favoritism except here,' then it's not clear. I think everybody
- understands equal. It's relatively easy to measure, as in exactly
- how far we've gotten and exactly how far we have to go. Protectionism
- is not clear. It's possible to imagine there's something even
- anti-American in it. Limiting free speech..." Crichton drops
- it for a moment with some sort of back-of-the-throat sound of
- exasperation.
- </p>
- <p> He's not talking about physical invasion. He's talking about,
- one gathers from his book and his discourse, the folly of trying
- to redesign gender relations in the workplace by defining harassment,
- in the subtle, gray areas, so specifically that litigation or
- incarceration will eventually do away with every offense, make
- the office a perfect world. This may be the anthropologist at
- work (or a too casual interpretation). Beyond that, if a certain
- perfume or cologne is intoxicating, everyone should know by
- now to remain silent or, in close quarters, stop breathing.
- Crichton's book examines, at a sensationalistic but not implausible
- level, just what a powerful weapon a claim, or even the threat
- of a claim, of sexual harassment is today.
- </p>
- <p> Having written it, Crichton is out of that metaphorical room
- he has spoken of. He won't be making a life's work of this issue,
- as he says. But he won't have heard the last of it either. However,
- he will be onto something else by the time the criticism comes
- battering at the gate. He'll be rolling toward another minefield
- that has snagged his curiosity. For the moment, though, he is
- on a plane--not to the Australian outback, but at least as
- far as Hawaii.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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