The Evolution of Science Fiction discussion

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Snow Crash
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April Group Read - Snow Crash
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Jo
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Apr 01, 2016 11:38AM

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If we're here to talk about how Sci Fi evolved, then where does this fit? I noticed recently that Heinlein was a lot looser than his contemporaries, and I think this book is an even bigger step away from the more clinical style that you get from Asimov or Clarke.


I found it worse than sloppy and annoying, and abandoned it early on. I've been thinking about giving it another try, because it's our group read, if I find the time later this month.

Personally, I loved the flippant tone of the writing and the fast-paced action sequences in the first chapter. Stephenson keeps that up the whole way through the book, so if you didn't like the first chapter, you probably won't like the last chapter any better. People tell me that Stephenson played it straight on his other books, so maybe you would be better off with Anathem or Cryptonomicon.
Snow Crash definitely owes a debt to Neuromancer, but it's been so long since I read that one that I can't really compare them. People who split genre hairs claim that Neuromancer is a true cyberpunk book, and Snow Crash is a post-cyberpunk or a deconstructed cyberpunk book. I'm not sure what those labels mean.



Wow, reading is an individual experience. It sounds like a lot of people are having trouble getting through Snow Crash, but for me it was a weekend read. On the other hand, I have tried to read Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire three times without making it past the Quidditch section. To me, that book is really hard to get through.

You bet. I'm about 1/4 of the way thru the book, and I think it's fabulous. For all its cyber pyrotechnics, the book falls into the mainstream of sci fi in many ways. The author is showing us our current world through a funhouse mirror, and his storytelling contains much tongue-in-cheek satire. He's taking capitalism and privatization in our society to its extreme logical conclusion--a frightening prospect--where people's real world dreams are so curtailed they try to live as avatars in virtual reality.
The author replicates a virtual reality environment in print. The language is not really sloppy, IMO. It's calculated to be part of the in-your-head environment of the book, in this case, the mind of a video games player. I totally understand if others don't want to be there, and dislike the cyber-slang. This kind of book is not to everybody's taste.


Please do report. I abandoned Snow Crash early on. If it gets good, maybe I'll give it another try one of these days.


This is a genre I would have said I had not read much of as I really hated Neuromancer and didn't bother going much further as this is often highlighted as the best Cyberpunk novel.
Having just looked up a list of what are the best cyberpunk books are http://bestsciencefictionbooks.com/be... I realise i've read more than I thought (9 from the list and 2 on my shelf waiting to be read). In fact there are some books that I would quite like to read here. I think it also shows I have no understanding of sci-fi classification whatsoever!

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/..."
Nice review.
I quite enjoyed it in the end but I did find it quite hard to get into it at the beginning. It's not really my favourite type of sci-fi though. In fact this is the second Neal Stephenson book i've read (Cryptonomicon being the first) and I had the same problem before. I think in both cases it's more due to the subject matter.
Books mentioned in this topic
Cryptonomicon (other topics)Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire (other topics)
Cryptonomicon (other topics)
Anathem (other topics)
Cryptonomicon (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
William Gibson (other topics)Neal Stephenson (other topics)