Sphere: A Riveting Science Fiction Thriller

From #1 New York Times bestselling author Michael Crichton, a riveting science fiction thriller about group of scientists sent to investigate a ship resting on the ocean floor and a discovery that defies imagination.

“Crichton keeps us guessing at every turn.”—Los Angeles Times

“A page-turner. . . . Cinematic, with powerful visual images and nonstop action.”—Newsweek

In the middle of the South Pacific, a thousand feet below the surface of the water, a huge vessel is discovered resting on the ocean floor. It is a spaceship of phenomenal dimensions, apparently undamaged by its fall from the sky. And, most startling, it appears to be at least three hundred years old. But even more fantastic—and frightening—is what waits inside . . .


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Published Jan 26, 2016

528 pages

Average rating: 6.22

9 RATINGS

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Books & Brews

Books & Brews is an evening adult book club from the Trussville Public Library where you can share your thoughts about this month's book while enjoying delicious food and drinks at Ferus Artisan Ales. It meets on the second Monday of every month at 7:15 PM in the event room at Ferus. 

Community Reviews

ElroyJetson
Oct 14, 2025
3/10 stars
I first read Sphere in paperback not long after it was published. As a male, avid SciFi reader at the time, it didn't seem out of the ordinary to me and was a bit spooky. I must admit, I never saw the movie and I even recommended it to my book club since most members are much younger than me. Thought it would be good to get into some 'old school' SciFi authors. Man, was I in for an awakening! This time around, I experienced the audiobook and I'll go ahead and say the reader was a bit over-dramatic for my tastes. At times, I had to just turn it off because he got a little overbearing. But that wasn't the worst of it. I like to think I've grown with the times over the years and I think it helped me awaken to the fact that this book is dripping with misogyny. Why didn't I see that back in the day? Crichton's treatment of Beth Halpern was really unforgiveable. It really made me cringe this time around. I mean, the premise of the team is that they are all tops in their fields, but Beth comes across as moody, bossy, and that old male assigned trope - "hormonally challenged." Aside from this, the book sucked in other ways. First, the team bickers entirely too much. I understand academic infighting in a university setting, but these folks are all from different disciplines - yet they are almost always downplaying and down-putting their colleagues on this mission. Since the character development is fairly shallow, we don't really get a true reason for this. Sure, Harry has some mental ghosts and a chip on his shoulder and Ted is a whiny "engineer-turned-TV-personality." But every scientific team I've known about gives at least some deference to their counterparts and respect for what that person knows and has contributed during career. In Sphere, they seem to just hate each other all the time and go off doing things on their own with no consideration for the opinions of others. Finally, as one of my book club members put it, Norman is really an unreliable narrator in the story. So, I've finished this book twice and at this time, I couldn't recommend it to anyone. Watch the movie instead - I'm sure it is at least entertaining as a horror flick.

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