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Loading... Cryptonomicon (original 1999; edition 2002)by Neal Stephenson (Author)
Work detailsCryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson (1999)
Total can not get into this book. Within the first 60 pages it gets bogged down in conversations on mathematical theory. Sorry Neal Stephenson. I give up. ( )If this book had been written by just about anyone else, I don't know if I'd have had the patience for over 900 pages. But it's Neal Stephenson. Crytography, hackers, anarchy, and nerds. How could I give this anything but five stars? The only complaint, and I use the word loosely, is the traditional Stephenson ending. I felt that the last third of the book went to a strange place, killing one character and leaving another off-stage almost entirely, and then ending the story when it feels like there's more to wrap up. But I've come to accept it as an authorial quirk. Immense, sprawling, overwhelming, yes, all of that. Cyptonomicon is brilliant in a lot of ways -- the rich historical veracity, the scope of the plot, the inventiveness. It is also hard to read, in that there are way too many goddamn subplots (and they tie up too neatly, but that's not a hard-to-read complaint, that's a personal hatred of tidiness in literature), the technical stuff is presented in tremendous lumps of indigestible nonficton (and I am a cryptography geek and a hobbyist programmer), and I fell out of love in the second half. I loved the first parts, don't get me wrong -- there's a lot of rollicking fun for people who love [b:Enigma|1|Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince (Harry Potter, #6)|J.K. Rowling|http://photo.goodreads.com/books/1255614960s/1.jpg|2962987], for example, and there are some awesome characters, like Amy Shaftoe and Avi, but by and large, I started getting impatient and bored about....600 pages in. The gold plot, once it starts thickening, is where Stephenson lost me, I think. Also the Sweden part, which I still have no comprehension of. And I'm not motivated enough to re-read it to figure it out. Great book, although the ending fizzles a little; Bobby, Douglas, and America Shaftoe, Lawrence and Randy Waterhouse, Goto Dengo; cryptology, lost Japanese gold, conspiracies; far-fetched but internally coherent, fun and funny; I really enjoyed reading this. Lots of cool ideas, mixed with throwaway stuff about Cap'n Crunch and masturbation.
''Cryptonomicon,'' on the other hand, is a wet epic -- as eager to please as a young-adult novel, it wants to blow your mind while keeping you well fed and happy. For the most part, it succeeds. It's brain candy for bitheads.
References to this work on external resources.
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More than fifty years after Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse and Sergeant Bobby Shaftoe are assigned to Detachment 2702, a secret cryptographic mission, their grandchildren--Randy and Amy--join forces to create a "data haven" in the South Pacific, only to uncover a massive conspiracy with roots in Deta… (more)
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