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Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson
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Cryptonomicon

by Neal Stephenson

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LibraryThing recommendations

  1. The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer by Neal Stephenson
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  5. The Code Book: The Science of Secrecy from Ancient Egypt to Quantum Cryptography by Simon Singh
  1. Applied cryptography : protocols, algorithms, and source code in C by Bruce Schneier
  2. The Codebreakers: The Comprehensive History of Secret Communication from Ancient Times to the Internet by David Kahn
  3. Globalhead by Michael Bruce Sterling
  4. Crypto: How the Code Rebels Beat the Government Saving Privacy in the Digital Age by Steven Levy
  5. Heavy Weather by Michael Bruce Sterling

Member recommendations:

daysailor recommends PopCo by Scarlett Thomas, "Same kind of edgy writing, intertwining cryptography history with good story-telling"

Zaklog recommends Gödel, Escher, Bach: An Eternal Golden Braid by Douglas R. Hofstadter, "Cryptonomicon strikes me as the kind of book that Hofstadter would write if he wrote fiction. Both books are complex, with discursive passages on mathematics (see more) and a positively weird sense of humor. If you enjoyed (rather than endured) the explanatory sections on cryptography and the charts of Waterhouse's love life (among other, rarely charted things) you should really like this book."

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Two tires fly. Two wail. A bamboo grove, all chopped down. From it, warring sounds.
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For a long time there is really nothing to be seen except steam; but after Golgotha's been burning for an hour or two, it becomes possible to see that underneath the shallow water, spreading down the vally floor, indeed right around the isolated boulder where Randy's perched, is a bright, thick river of gold.
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0380788624, Paperback)

Neal Stephenson enjoys cult status among science fiction fans and techie types thanks to Snow Crash, which so completely redefined conventional notions of the high-tech future that it became a self-fulfilling prophecy. But if his cyberpunk classic was big, Cryptonomicon is huge... gargantuan... massive, not just in size (a hefty 918 pages including appendices) but in scope and appeal. It's the hip, readable heir to Gravity's Rainbow and the Illuminatus trilogy. And it's only the first of a proposed series--for more information, read our interview with Stephenson.

Cryptonomicon zooms all over the world, careening conspiratorially back and forth between two time periods--World War II and the present. Our 1940s heroes are the brilliant mathematician Lawrence Waterhouse, cryptanalyst extraordinaire, and gung ho, morphine-addicted marine Bobby Shaftoe. They're part of Detachment 2702, an Allied group trying to break Axis communication codes while simultaneously preventing the enemy from figuring out that their codes have been broken. Their job boils down to layer upon layer of deception. Dr. Alan Turing is also a member of 2702, and he explains the unit's strange workings to Waterhouse. "When we want to sink a convoy, we send out an observation plane first.... Of course, to observe is not its real duty--we already know exactly where the convoy is. Its real duty is to be observed.... Then, when we come round and sink them, the Germans will not find it suspicious."

All of this secrecy resonates in the present-day story line, in which the grandchildren of the WWII heroes--inimitable programming geek Randy Waterhouse and the lovely and powerful Amy Shaftoe--team up to help create an offshore data haven in Southeast Asia and maybe uncover some gold once destined for Nazi coffers. To top off the paranoiac tone of the book, the mysterious Enoch Root, key member of Detachment 2702 and the Societas Eruditorum, pops up with an unbreakable encryption scheme left over from WWII to befuddle the 1990s protagonists with conspiratorial ties.

Cryptonomicon is vintage Stephenson from start to finish: short on plot, but long on detail so precise it's exhausting. Every page has a math problem, a quotable in-joke, an amazing idea, or a bit of sharp prose. Cryptonomicon is also packed with truly weird characters, funky tech, and crypto--all the crypto you'll ever need, in fact, not to mention all the computer jargon of the moment. A word to the wise: if you read this book in one sitting, you may die of information overload (and starvation). --Therese Littleton

(retrieved from Amazon Mon, 19 Nov 2007 03:58:11 -0500)

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