Rating: Summary: When will Stephenson write more? Review: The Diamond Age is a more sophisticated, more challenging and more rewarding book than Snow Crash (which was a fantastic first novel). Stephenson is an enormous talent - anyone desperate for more from him while we await his next book should read the 10,000-word travelogue he wrote in the December 1996 issue of Wired. It is as different from his novels as they are from each other, but a joy to read nonetheless. Anyone with no interest in technology will hate it.
Rating: Summary: Pretty dang good Review: This is a really good cyberpunk novel, set in the near future (but not incredibly near). I'm still reading _Snow Crash_, so I won't even attempt to compare the two as so many others have done. Stephenson has a firm view of the future, and has done an excellent and thorough job of thinking out the implications of nanotechnology. He's also got some interesting and at times subtle things to say about where we are headed as a civilization in regard to education, fragmentation, entertainment, and a hundred other areas. You won't agree with everything he thinks -- but you'll find yourself at least rethinking your ideas, in addition to just having a good time being completely immersed in a world strikingly similar, and yet substantially different, from our own.
Rating: Summary: The Diamond Age Review: While Snow Crash, Stephenson's previous book, was based around virtual reality, The Diamond Age is based around nanotechnology and how society would change as nanotech became more and more widely available. This book shows that besides being an engaging and humourous cyberpunk writer, Stephenson is also an excellent Victorian novelist.The only real problem I have with this book is that it fell apart slightly towards the end, as did Snow Crash.
Rating: Summary: From the House of the Venerable and Inscrutable Colonel Review: The easy route after Snow Crash would have been to deliver another "CyberPunk" novel, but Stephenson delivers a fascinating mix of technology and cultural extrapolation. I loved Neuromancer, and subsequently bought everything Gibson has done, but everything Gibson has done since has been a riff on that classic. One of the things I really enjoyed about The Diamond Age was the fact that it was so different from Snow Crash, and the implication that there are more surprises from the desk of Mr. Stephenson. Neal, if you're listening, we demand more !
Rating: Summary: Everything a great science fiction book should be Review: I read the author's _Snow Crash_ and although it was tons 'o' fun, full of galloping action and gee-whiz hardware, the characters were two-dimensional and rudimentary. Diamond Age doesn't fall prey to this weakness that seems to be endemic among hardware-type sci-fi. The characters of Nell, Miranda, Hackworth and the inscrutable Dr. X are compelling, and rather than being mere avatars of good and evil, each character is a complex blend of motivations and passions. The speculative fiction, dealing in this case with nanotechnology, is very well thought out. There is much less of the satirical feel I got out of Snow Crash. By the way, the only reason I didn't give this a 10 is because I'm now reading The Sparrow, and THAT is a 10!
Rating: Summary: Excellent, rich, fascinating novel! Review: SNOW CRASH was the first Stephenson book I read and I loved it. DIAMOND AGE is even better. It is complex and richly detailed yet fast paced and difficult to put down. Obviously having sharpened his prose skills, Stephenson builds a fascinating future set in a tumultuous "New Shanghai" where nanotechnology permeates every aspect of life and a rigid class system is about to be overturned. He takes you through the lives and times of a number of interesting characters and brings them together in a surprising, grandiose ending. In short, if you like William Gibson, you'll like this. His discussion of nanotech actually outclasses Gibson's attempts in IDORU. If you liked SNOW CRASH you'll like this one even better.
Rating: Summary: Brilliant novel Review: This book is far better than /Snow Crash/ (and yes, I liked Snow Crash). This Stephenson work is absolutely brilliant; he discusses philosophical points with subtlety and creates the coolest main character since John Varley's Cirocco Jones.
Rating: Summary: Cool technology but a weak ending Review: Like many other reviewers I found the technological aspects of the story well worth the price of the book. But toward the end it feels as though Neal Stephenson has grown tired of the characters and we start losing a clear feeling for them and what they are doing. The ending is not good and more should have been explicitly written about the goal Nell was seeking and the devotion of Miranda and what she was prepared to put herself through. Overall a good read and I have bought Snow Crash.
Rating: Summary: a new sci-fi genuis of encredible style and substance. Review: The sub-title of the this book "A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer." To Neal Stepenson's book "The Diamond Age" Captures the idealism of our new cyber culture. It gives us a taste of our dreams and fears. we explore the life of a young girl living in the post-future of Shanghia, we are lead on a journey of discovery to her own being with the use of a primer. The primer is a story book that teaches life lessons, only this story book is alive. Mixing the fantasy with the reality of the stories underneath the cover that slowly become one. It will surprise and intrique you the the very end. Enjoy.
Rating: Summary: Better than Snow Crash, but where's the AI? Review: There are a lot of interesting plot elements, but they don't form a coherent whole for the most part. The ending is kind of weak. Then there is the fact that there is no artificial intelligence to speak of in his world, which is a necessary device for his plot (and because of that really sticks out like a sore thumb), but totally unbelievable considering the other marvels that are shown, even from a conservative point of view. If it weren't so full of neat ideas and plain fun, I'd give it a much lower rating. Read it while it's fresh, because as with most books based on cool science, it probably won't age very well.
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