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glenfleskie's review against another edition
adventurous
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
2.5
This book made me become a misandrist. I hate Randy Waterhouse so much. It’s also absolutely chock full of this white savior colonialist mindset.
it has this view of tech as fundamentally and only male, with absolutely no acknowledgement of any women who do technical work ever.
I had to read this sentence:
“His prostate is the size and consistency of a croquet ball. He become thinking of it as ‘little man love.’”
it has this view of tech as fundamentally and only male, with absolutely no acknowledgement of any women who do technical work ever.
I had to read this sentence:
“His prostate is the size and consistency of a croquet ball. He become thinking of it as ‘little man love.’”
Graphic: Confinement, Death, Addiction, Cannibalism, Colonisation, Injury/Injury detail, Sexism, Rape, Child death, Drug use, Genocide, Gore, Gun violence, Sexual assault, Medical trauma, Misogyny, Murder, Racism, Sexual content, Suicidal thoughts, War, and Violence
lostinthelibrary's review against another edition
adventurous
challenging
mysterious
tense
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.5
This book was A LOT. Huge in length, scope and ideas. I feel like I've been reading it for ages and can't say that I'm not somewhat relieved that I finally finished it. Neal Stephenson is a master at world building and plotting. He has devised a very believable alternative history that is so close to reality that I had to constantly be looking up which parts came from history and which from his imagination. There are so many ideas about mathematics, finance and global politics and although I tried very hard to grasp them a lot went over my head. However, these are delivered through likeable characters that you really root for and this got me through a lot of the drier sections of the text. I'm still not completely sure that I "got" it but I definitely admired the craft and enjoyed the ride.
Graphic: War, Violence, and Confinement
Moderate: Cannibalism
jodar's review against another edition
adventurous
dark
tense
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? It's complicated
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
3.0
The novel is a story of action and ideas more than of interpersonal relationships. Its focus is war, hot and cold, and the key thought that war pivots around banal brutality of warmongering thugs being countered and stymied by the cunning and ingenuity of the smart. War is viewed as an inevitable and universal human condition across time and space, perpetrated largely by men seeking power.
The novel feels long and drawn out. The switching between the ‘now’ of the 1990s and the past of World War 2 seemed to me a bit random. Some editorial tightening of the plot would have improved the pace.
The nerdishness of some characters and the skilful, incisive action of others may have impressed me more a couple of decades back, but reading it now I did not find myself empathising greatly with any of them.
There are some moments of pathos and triumph over adversity, but in the end – a long time coming! – it presents a depressing, dark and nasty view of our human nature. I hope sincerely that this is a distorted view that overly highlights the evil within us.
The novel feels long and drawn out. The switching between the ‘now’ of the 1990s and the past of World War 2 seemed to me a bit random. Some editorial tightening of the plot would have improved the pace.
The nerdishness of some characters and the skilful, incisive action of others may have impressed me more a couple of decades back, but reading it now I did not find myself empathising greatly with any of them.
There are some moments of pathos and triumph over adversity, but in the end – a long time coming! – it presents a depressing, dark and nasty view of our human nature. I hope sincerely that this is a distorted view that overly highlights the evil within us.
Graphic: Death, Slavery, Violence, and War
silver_valkyrie_reads's review against another edition
I expect I’ll come back to this one eventually, it’s just been a bit much for my recent reading moods.
Moderate: War and Sexual content
crufts's review against another edition
adventurous
dark
informative
tense
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
2.75
Summary: A thrilling ending sequence to this 918-page book is dragged down by a glacial middle section and gratuitous crude elements.
After reading Neal Stephenson's Anathem (2008) and hugely enjoying it, I went into Cryptonomicon (1998) with high hopes. Fortunately or unfortunately, it seemed that the author's skill had improved dramatically during the intervening decade, especially when it comes to maintaining the pace of 900-page books.
The story follows multiple interwoven narratives in the 1940s and 1990s: that of Bobby Shaftoe, Lawrence Waterhouse, Randy Waterhouse, America Shaftoe, Goto Dengo, and-- stop, stop! I can't take any more! Every time we switch off to another one of these narratives, the pace slows even further, and even more distance is put between us and the other time period. The only way I was even able to keep track of what was going on was by reading the book in as short a time as I could manage, so that previous events would still (hopefully) be fresh in my mind.
Even so, there was a lot of crufty detail lying around that could be cleared up. A narrative this complex doesn't have the luxury of including all this extraneous detail - the reader doesn't know what's important and what's not, and we just end up lost.
Relatedly, the level of technical explanation is not consistent. At times the author rattles off paragraphs of wartime jargon without any explanation at all, expecting us to just understand it; at other times, he's carefully explaining that `ssh` stands for `secure shell`. Are you expecting us to know everything or not?
After reading Neal Stephenson's Anathem (2008) and hugely enjoying it, I went into Cryptonomicon (1998) with high hopes. Fortunately or unfortunately, it seemed that the author's skill had improved dramatically during the intervening decade, especially when it comes to maintaining the pace of 900-page books.
The story follows multiple interwoven narratives in the 1940s and 1990s: that of Bobby Shaftoe, Lawrence Waterhouse, Randy Waterhouse, America Shaftoe, Goto Dengo, and-- stop, stop! I can't take any more! Every time we switch off to another one of these narratives, the pace slows even further, and even more distance is put between us and the other time period. The only way I was even able to keep track of what was going on was by reading the book in as short a time as I could manage, so that previous events would still (hopefully) be fresh in my mind.
Even so, there was a lot of crufty detail lying around that could be cleared up. A narrative this complex doesn't have the luxury of including all this extraneous detail - the reader doesn't know what's important and what's not, and we just end up lost.
Relatedly, the level of technical explanation is not consistent. At times the author rattles off paragraphs of wartime jargon without any explanation at all, expecting us to just understand it; at other times, he's carefully explaining that `ssh` stands for `secure shell`. Are you expecting us to know everything or not?
That said, Cryptonomicon had a lot of good points:
- Quite a few laughs.
- Unusual and clever uses of cryptography.
- The final two sequences (in the prison, and then the final goldhunt) were great, especially with the use of the Solitaire encryption system and the other ways Randy was obscuring his work.
Was it worth reading 912 pages for? I don't know. I came in looking for an interesting book using cryptography concepts. Cryptonomicon has a little of that - but also a lot of waffle and unnecessary crude references (see content warnings below). I feel like it has a lot of potential for a TV series, or maybe just a rewrite, but I think Neal Stephenson's later work is better.
Graphic: Violence, Gun violence, Sexual content, and War
Moderate: Racism and Sexism
Minor: Ableism, Antisemitism, Slavery, and Sexual violence
Strong content warnings for everything related to the Second World War, including the various human rights violations involved.What is with all the crude references and descriptions? Why does the author have to keep describing vehicles or buildings or countries as "phallic" (p452), call a laptop port an "anus" (p508), and refer to any kind of covering as a "condom"?
See also p476's sentence "The dancers stomp ... with autistic determination." Can't you use a word which actually means what you want to say and creates a picture in the reader's mind, instead of using dramatic words for the sake of it? This is especially weird in a book where half of the main characters have a stack of autistic traits, and there's even a scene where two of the characters discuss the kind of minds which tend to get into cryptoanalysis.
The main characters' opinions about gender roles in the story are also tiresomely stale, even in the "present day" (1990s) narrative. There's nothing wrong with having endemic sexism in your story's setting, but it gets old quick if the protagonists also think it's okay.
maneatingbadger's review against another edition
adventurous
funny
informative
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
Moderate: War
Minor: Addiction, Sexual violence, and Cannibalism
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