From the Bookshelf of What's the Name of That Book???…
Find A Copy At
Group Discussions About This Book
No group discussions for this book yet.
What Members Thought

I first read this ~10 years ago and just re-read it as someone reminded me that it predicts the future of reading. And it does - what I love about Stephenson is his high level of prescient-ness. In fact I think it also predicts a lot of the future of nanotechnology and entertainment.
The Young Ladies Illustrated Primer is a dynamic book with an AI in it. Imagine Alexa or Siri in 5-10 years, smart enough to make up stories on the fly and answer questions about or even redirect the storyline. The ...more
The Young Ladies Illustrated Primer is a dynamic book with an AI in it. Imagine Alexa or Siri in 5-10 years, smart enough to make up stories on the fly and answer questions about or even redirect the storyline. The ...more

Just when I really think I feel comfortable in a genre like science fiction I read someone like Stephenson and realize I don't know squat. It happened when I read Snow Crash and it happened now.
I love the concept here: nanotechnology affects everything. Seems decent enough an idea. I love the main story here: young Nell and her brother Harv live in an abusive home and Harv steals an electronic interactive illustrated primer for Nell which mirrors their life and encourages them they are strong en ...more
I love the concept here: nanotechnology affects everything. Seems decent enough an idea. I love the main story here: young Nell and her brother Harv live in an abusive home and Harv steals an electronic interactive illustrated primer for Nell which mirrors their life and encourages them they are strong en ...more

Sep 02, 2007
Snail in Danger (Sid) Nicolaides
rated it
liked it
Shelves:
science-fiction,
used-to-own
This is actually the date of my latest re-read, not my first. Reaction: yeah, the tech is cool, but ZOMG that book needs some plot coherence help.
Interestingly, the Sci-fi Channel has ordered a 6 hour miniseries based on this book. It'll feature George Clooney. I thought, this could be great, it's tremendously well-suited for a visual medium, and frankly there's tons of stuff that could be cut from the book without substantial harm to the story. And then I realized that Stephenson is writing the ...more
Interestingly, the Sci-fi Channel has ordered a 6 hour miniseries based on this book. It'll feature George Clooney. I thought, this could be great, it's tremendously well-suited for a visual medium, and frankly there's tons of stuff that could be cut from the book without substantial harm to the story. And then I realized that Stephenson is writing the ...more

The Diamond Age had some ideas in it I really liked. I loved the idea of a tablet-like device that could teach a young girl to read/fight/program/whatever (and also it being limited by its "ractors"). I liked the nanobots that settled like dust onto people, and the "wet net" idea.
For some reason, I had a really hard time finishing this book. I think the politics didn't excite me; I was more interested in character development that never finished. It makes me wish that Stephenson would write mor ...more
For some reason, I had a really hard time finishing this book. I think the politics didn't excite me; I was more interested in character development that never finished. It makes me wish that Stephenson would write mor ...more

Loved the first half, in which the plot was wild but comprehensible. Enjoyed the second half, but I was disappointed that Stephenson ditched many of the characters and most of the story for a dissertation on artificial intelligence, thought as virus, programming, and other musings. It was interesting, at least the part I could follow, but the story got lost. It had some HUGE plot holes at the end. Still, quite a ride.
...more

I thoroughly enjoyed this book. It is a great example of the creativity of Neal Stephenson. He takes a look at the next step in human history (Stone Age, Iron Age. . . Diamond Age) and tells a story about a Neo-Victorian world in which nano technology can compile matter at the molecular level to create food, automobiles, buildings or whole islands. Stephenson has an undeniable talent for creating worlds and developing characters, that talent is obvious here.

This book was another gift from my dear friend Keith. I enjoyed reading the story, it was a wild ride, but I was a bit let down by the ending. Although by now I can't remember what that ending was.
...more

loved it. except for the ending, which didn't thrill me, but i'm tough on endings. highly recommend.
...more


Jan 02, 2012
Kelaine
marked it as to-read

Dec 06, 2013
Lily
marked it as to-read