Ratings93
Average rating3.7
Three passengers are dead. Fifty-six are injured. The interior cabin virtually destroyed. But the pilot manages to land the plane. . . .
At a moment when the issue of safety and death in the skies is paramount in the public mind, a lethal midair disaster aboard a commercial twin-jet airliner bound from Hong Kong to Denver triggers a pressured and frantic investigation.
Airframe is nonstop reading: the extraordinary mixture of super suspense and authentic information on a subject of compelling interest that has been a Crichton landmark since The Andromeda Strain.
(back cover)
Reviews with the most likes.
I don't listen to too many audiobooks, and this one was pretty decent. The reader had a good speaking voice and wasn't monotone. At three discs, the story feels a bit short, but the Crichton mystery and suspense was there.
This book nosed up, dived down and nosed up again. A no nonsense, info-dense sci-fi. I couldn't care much about the characters, but it definitely had my heart racing.
Apart from the thriller elements, the criticism of modern media, was to the point. I found myself smile-nodding at every sentence.
Talking to a reporter these days was like a deadly chess match; you had to think several steps ahead; you had to imagine all the possible ways a reporter might distort your statement. The atmosphere was relentlessly adversarial.
But now reporters came to the story with the lead fixed in their minds; they saw their job as proving what they already knew. They didn't want information so much as evidence of villainy. In this mode, they were openly skeptical of your point of view, since they assumed you were just being evasive. They proceeded from a presumption of universal guilt, in an atmosphere of muted hostility and suspicion.