Cryptonomicon

by Neal Stephenson
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Cryptonomicon
 
by
Neal Stephenson
published
June 26th 2008 (first published 1999)
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binding
Library Binding, 1152 pages

isbn
1439501793   (isbn13: 9781439501795)





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Sci Fi or not sci fi (may contain spoilers) 2 22 06/04/2008 05:30PM  

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Erez Schatz
07/24/08

bookshelves: own-it
Read in July, 2008
recommends it for: no-one in particular
Greenspun's Tenth Rule of Programming says, that any sufficiently complicated C or Fortran program contains an ad hoc informally-specified bug-ridden slow implementation of half of Common Lisp. (Including Common Lisp, added Robert Morris)
Lisp, to qoute L. Peter Deutsch, can make you realise that software could be close to executable mathematics.

Cryptonomicon is surprisingly similar to the previous paragraph, both as an analogy to the book, and for the useless use of computer-based qoute, j...more
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Nick
08/20/08

Read in August, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
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Brooke
10/02/07

Read in January, 2005
Note: This review is from my blog, circa 2005.

I finished reading Cryptonomicon by Neal Stephenson about a week ago. It took me over a month to finish, not because it wasn't great and exciting, but because it was 937 fucking pages long!

I have to say that Neal Stephenson is one of the most interesting and unique authors I have come across in some time now. The book had three main characters/story lines, and each of them had it's own strongly independent voice, yet strung together with a u...more
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Kris
04/20/08

bookshelves: my-favorite-books
This book is part thriller and part historical novel. The narrative switches each chapter between current time (circa 1995) and WWII. There are 2 main families we follow, the Shaftoes and the Waterhouses, and their lives are interwoven, both in the past and in the modern-day sections. Stephenson does a great job of switching back and forth between the families, and between times, and we see how the modern generation of each family is a product of their ancestors. Some may find the transition bet...more
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Conrad
12/15/07

bookshelves: fiction, owned
Read in January, 2008
My friend Stuart's reading this and I stupidly started spoiling one of the best lines in the book (it pops up as Shaftoe's motto) and he was mildly irritated with me. Fortunately for him, he is vastly smarter than me so while he was quite generously acting annoyed he was probably thinking to himself, "Maybe one day I will spoil math and engineering and the details of Riemann zeta functions for Conrad." Now I'm rereading it out of sympathy and it's even better than I remembered.

Anyw...more
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Michelle
bookshelves: 1001_books, sci-fi
Read in May, 2008
it took me a month to get through this book. amazing, considering my usual speed with the written word, but quite true. this behemoth refused to be devoured in my usual hours-at-a-time fashion, nope. more like very high quality cheesecake, in that it's so rich you can only take a few bites before you need to assimilate.

part of the story is about a WWII GI, who happens to be so gung-ho and talented at both completing difficult missions successfully and staying alive at their completion tha...more
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Matt
10/11/07

Read in February, 2003
I stake the claim that this novel is the "Catch 22" of the new millennium. Smacking of Heller and borrowing somewhat from Pynchon, this novel also stakes new ground and weaves an engaging yet intricate plot. There are also many asides which encompass basic cryptographic theory, History and mechanics of modern finance and economics, Hacking methods including "Van Eck Phreaking" and EMP pulses, Music Theory, and speculations upon the future and impact information will have.

...more
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Taka
01/15/08

bookshelves: japan_jul07-present, post-modern_lit
Read in January, 2008
Luv'd it, luv'd it, luv'd it--

This massive novel (1130 pages) encompasses everything from finance, cryptography, WWII, treasure hunting, and everything in between that's fun and exciting. Neal Stephenson has definitely become my favorite contemporary writer along with David Foster Wallace and Jonathan Franzen. Though by comparison, his style is less literary and ornate, and his humor just a little bit less sophisticated than David Foster Wallace's (but still laugh-out-loud funny at times), h...more
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Ryan
03/31/08

Read in September, 2006
Reading Neal Stephenson's The Cryptonomicon was, simply, a divine reading experience - must have been the most fun reading a book I've had in a long time. Stephenson always has this skill of taking several different story threads, seemingly completely unrelated to each other, and then combining them together in ways that are completely novel, and yet at the same time make complete sense when you look at them in retrospect. This skill is especially notable in Cryptonomicon, because the stories st...more
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Sean
09/29/08

bookshelves: historical, mathematics, science
Read in September, 2008
Neal Stephenson is brilliant. Quite obviously so. And one of his strengths lies in writing books that make abstruse, convoluted niche subjects feel approachable and exciting to the average reader. His attention to detail and his playful tangents, asides and divagations are charming, witty and often fascinating.

Unfortunately this does not always translate into well-written and well-structured narratives. To put it mildly, Cryptonomicon drags. It meanders. Occasionally it stops complete...more
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Chris
09/27/07

bookshelves: favourites
Read in June, 2005
One day I went out shopping for a book. My list of unread, prepurchased titles sat neatly in a stack by my disused fire-place and none of them set me alive with anticipation. I don't know what I wanted really, but I had a vague idea that there was a black book with numbers on the front that was a New York Times bestseller, and I quite fancied something clever related to code breaking or numbers. So I hopped on the subway, rode into Union Square and strolled over to B&N on 17th street and fou...more
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Krissa
01/31/08

bookshelves: masterpieces
Read in January, 2008
recommended to Krissa by: Conrad, Stuart
recommends it for: geeks
I mean, FINE, okay, this is one of the most engrossing books I've ever read. I don't really mean "best" or "best-written", necessarily. I mean, it's a messy sprawling epic that's almost too clever by half and full of hilarious characters and history just-so tweaked to accommodate them and also pure unadulterated geekiness. So it's not really for everyone but boy did I lap it up and then eat my huge slices of humble pie for everyone in my life that's been bugging me to read it...more
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  4 comments

Andrei
09/08/07

Read in August, 2007
I usually roll my eyes at blurbs on books, especially when they're as reductive and simple as the ones I'm about to cite, but "electrifying" and "a hell of a read" seem like the two most fitting ways to summarize my opinion on this book. I had a tough time putting this down. It's not a challenging book, but it's also not a stupid book and I was surprised to find how "literary" it actually is. Outside of that, and really most importantly, it's an absolute blast to re...more
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Jeff
03/30/08

Read in February, 2008
I read this book and I really liked it.

I liked the book a lot, but things about it have made me develop a whole speil. The story was great, interesting historical/thrill fiction. But! He could have easily cut a good 1/3 out of the book and it would have been fine. Mr Stephenson loves taking a long way around to describe things, and to compound the problem, his characters like to take the long way around to say things too. So you have this recursive loop of masturbation.

For example in one cha...more
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Mister Nurenberg
Read in July, 2008
I suppose I have to give Stephenson props for actually writing a book this long (1100+ pages!!), and for researching all the esoterica that fills those pages. But despite my intense like of Snow Crash, I have yet to find another Stephenson book I can stand. Quicksilver defeated me after 300 pages...it was clear Stephenson loved random obscure facts about Baroque Era England and felt a compilation of those facts could substitute for a plot. It didn't.

He tries the same thing h...more
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Coco
02/27/08

Read in January, 2006
I'm shocked by the critical acclaim this book received in the sci-fi category but I suppose even a turd can float. Two stars is really pushing it. Maybe a star for the number of laughs I got per 100 pages. This is the work of a technically inept egomaniac. He does have some technical background (he drops Unix hints and anagrams the name of a supposed deity who dies and then later comes back w/ no explanation??) However, it's not enough “savoir faire” for any of the content to make sense. It ...more
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Clay
09/18/08

bookshelves: science-fiction
Read in September, 2006
I read Neal Stephenson's Cryptonomicon after reading his trilogy, The Baroque Cycle, and I was not disappointed - in fact, just the opposite. I have become a diehard fan of Stephenson's writing and his choice in subject matter. Stephenson is a genius when it comes to pulling you into a story. He will start off slowly introducing you to his characters and before you know it, he's pulled you in hook, line and sinker.
...more
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Blake
09/07/07

bookshelves: favorites, fiction, stephenson
Read in April, 2007
Stephenson is an amazing writer. He uses the entire first half of the book to establish characters, settings, and background, and the second half to actually tell the story. When you consider that the copy of the book I have is just over 900 pages, that translates into a lot of "marginally interesting but clever reading material" followed by a lot of "this is badass, why didn't I get this far sooner?" which in the end comes out to suck pretty hard, because you become angry ...more
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Skip
09/01/08

Read in August, 2008
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.