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Cryptonomicon

Cryptonomicon

List Price: $7.99
Your Price: $7.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: You will regret not buying and devouring this book!
Review: After a lifetime reading and loving books, this is one of the few that leaves me short of superlatives. It has it all...and it's so darned FUNNY.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Oh, where to begin...
Review: I wasn't even finished with the book before I was tempted to run down the street, grab strangers by the shoulders, and ask, 'Do you like to read? It doesn't matter WHAT you like to read, do you like to read?'. If they came anywhere near the affirmative in their answer, I'd slam a copy of this book into their hands.

If Tom Clancy were cool, this is the best book he'd ever write.

Honestly, I read so much, I'm almost never tempted to read anything twice, although there is certainly plenty that is more than worth of repeated reads. Even so, Stephenson's book was VERY hard not to flip from the last page to the first and start again.

It's driving me crazy, but I can find no information online about the state of his follow-up. Anyone?

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Good, but may overload your circuits!
Review: Cryptonomicon is a very terse, technical, challenging, mind consuming novel. If the length doesn't frighten you away, the details may. Full of techno-talk, crossing generations, and incredible attention to precision, it was a little tiring at times. There was a lot to keep track of and I felt that perhaps the two generations could have been split into two different novels to fully explore each set of protagonists and give them their own forums. However, Stephenson definitely has something here and it's definitely fascinating and captivating. Be sure to leave plenty of open time in you schedule for this one!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An Epic
Review: Over the summer, I made this the first book I've read for pleasure in almost a year. It took 2 weeks to get through the massive tome, but I noticed that I was sneaking away to it everytime I got a free minute.
Other reviewers can comment on the historical/technical accuracy; what struck me most were the vivid, cinematic descriptions. If you find the time, and enjoy techno-centric novels, you will enjoy this book.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: TOO MUCH INFORMATION
Review: Stephenson's novel sprawls, lurches, speeds, then tails away. There are two or three very tight concise novellas competing for one's attention. And the sum is somewhow less than its glittering parts.
Nabokov, in "Despair", had a passage where the narrator writes, "must be calm, keep my head. No good going on otherwise. Quite calm. Chocolate, as everybody knows...(let the reader imagine here a description of its making)."
I cite this reservation uncomfortably: Stephenson goes to great lengths to establish creditability of intellectual characterization. Many of the asides, in and of themselves, would serve the characters well. But over the course of the novel as a whole, I question how much is characterization per-se, and how much is Stephenson showing his props or simply showing off.
Someday this guy is going to write a gem for all time. This novel isn't it, but it's a remarkable start in the right direction.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Great book!
Review: What I really liked about Cryptonomicon was that it felt well researched and gave a good glimpse (i hope) of encryption during WW2. Also, the intertwined stories are very good and keep you turning the pages. The characters are likeable and you keep wanting to know what will happen to them.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A litmus test for cool....
Review: Neal Stephenson has been a respected sci-fi writer for some time. SNOWCRASH, and his later DIAMOND AGE, were great books, but the sci-fi appellation somehow seemed to cheapen their status and Mr. Stephenson's credibility. It's as if a good sci-fi novelist can't be as good as a good "serious" novelist. CRYPTONOMICON eliminates any doubts as to Mr. Stephenson's abilities.

CRYPTONOMICON requires the reader to be intelligent and inquisitive. It's a big book that requires the commitment that all big books require, namely, that you read it to the end. In return it delivers an absolutely engrossing story that spans 50 years, 3 generations, 4 continents and one world war. It has one of the best characters ever, Bobby Shaftoe, and one of the best systems ever devised for dividing up the remains of a deceased parent's estate. It tells its story while also expounding on mathematics, computer science, cryptography, engineering and Marines. In short, it is incredibly witty and smart.

Two additional notes: 1. As I read the reviews for this book I noticed something startling. The people who give this book a one-star rating sound like incredly shallow, attention-deficient children. Their biggest complaint is that CRYPTONOMICON is too long. But those who give it a good review sound intelligent. They sound like people I would want to have a chat with. That makes sense. Those who like Neal Stephenson tend to be cool. Those who do not like Neal Stephenson think People Magazine has trenchant articles on current events.
2. If you read a review and it complains about the Cap'n Crunch eating scene (as several do), discount the review's validity. That description comes very close to the beginning of the book and indicates that the reviewer did not read the entire novel.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Plenty of pain but no gain
Review: The only thing I can find to praise about this book is consistency. It's about as engrossing after page 10 as it is after page 890. (& I kept thinking it had to get better!) This is shear pointless verbosity without a single human-like character or sympathetic plot element. Stephenson can just about make the reader not care about the outcome of WWII.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Worth the time
Review: This is a really long book and I hesitated to start on it since my track record on finishing such is less than stellar. Turns out I was happily turning pages all the way to the end. Like Stephenson's other books it's built around an interesting view of the future, in this case an "off-shore data bank" service that depends on excellent crytography. The book is really two separate but related stories, one set in WWII and one a bit in the future, with the text jumping back and forth between them. Now, if someone had told me that before I started I would have groaned, but Stephenson holds it all together and makes it work beautifully. Good read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Cryptonomicon is brilliant!
Review: This is my new all time favorite book. I read it a second time and loved it even more! I was chortling with amusement practically every other page-- Stephenson's cynical, incisive editorial adds wonderful flavor. The utilization of Lawrence Waterhouse, a brilliant but nearly idiot-savant-like mathematician, to characterize a story surrounding the role code-breaking played during World War II was inspired, and Stephenson portrays Waterhouse intricately and magnificently. I found myself feeling like I was living behind Waterhouse's eyes while reading-- a wonderful way to keep what is obviously intended to be a particularly brilliant character more down to the level of the book's readers. I loved this character! I wanted more of this character and his interactions with Alan Turing.

Some nit-picky complaints: 1) the book was clearly the first of a series, and the end, while appropriate to the storyline, was a little anti-climactic given the superlative job done in the body of this work. 2) the math is far too rudimentary for mathematicians of the calibre of the characters, but I understand why this may have been done, 3) there is a little too much dwell-time on bodily fluids for my taste.

Nonetheless, I can't wait for the sequel! Bravo!


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