'Quicksilver' Website and Release Date 210
EvilBastard writes "Neil Stephenson's next book in the Baroque Cycle, Quicksilver, now has a publishing date of the 23rd of September, 2003. This book appears to follow the Shaftoe, Waterhouse and Root family line back to the early 18th Century. You can find a short extract online."
Next Book? (Score:2)
Re:Next Book? (Score:5, Informative)
If this thing is half as good as Cryptonomicon, it will be worth reading IMHO...
Re:Next Book? (Score:5, Funny)
I heard that he wants to make the prequel kid-friendly, and is introducing a large-eared sidekick that has an amusing Jamacian accent. I'm really looking forward to this one.
For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:5, Informative)
Snow Crash
Diamond Age
Crytptonomicon
In the Beginning was the Command Line
Zodiac plus two more books under a pen name.
Great author of a few geek clasics, with great insight into modern issues.
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:3, Informative)
Plus The Big U which was re-released a couple years ago after being super hard to find. Its his first book, and a great read.
The books he wrote with his uncle under the pseudonym Stephen Bury are Interface and The Cobweb.
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:4, Informative)
Interface and Cobweb are the two books written under the pseudonum of Stephen Bury.
Russ %-)
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:2)
Funny, I happen to have Interface and it's most definitely authored by Neal Stephenson (& Frederick George). They even put "By the author of Cryptonomicon and Snow Crash" under the title. It's a UK edition, ISBN 0-09-942775-3
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:2)
However, I have also seen a recent Australian printing under Stephenson in bookstores.
Russ %-)
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:2)
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:2)
Well, that may be true but folks also teach Emily Dickenson, so there's no accounting for taste.
In other words, just because they are teaching it does not ipso facto make something great.
I enjoyed Snow Crash a lot.
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:2)
Excuse me. I thought this was a discussion, not a playground.
Then I realized I was at
Re:For those of you who don't know who this is... (Score:2)
He is the only writer that when he releases a new book I must buy that book the first day it's available. Far and away my favorite author. I like Sterling too but he isn't in the same ballp
If you're into this kind of thing... (Score:5, Informative)
Pattern Recognition by William Gibson
Signal to Noise by Eric S. Nylund
Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom by Cory Doctorow
sequel to nylund's _signal to noise_ (Score:5, Informative)
sounds interesting (Score:5, Interesting)
On a side note, he mentioned that he only speaks about once every five years and that he's very anti-social. He said his books are not a social process and come entirely from him, as opposed to including feedback from others. Still, I'm glad to have this man off in his little corner of the world thinking and researching about fascinating topics, broadcasting his findings to the rest of us.
what I want to know.... (Score:3, Funny)
I enjoy his books, but his tendancy to "accelerate" makes me think that he gets bored with them far sooner than I do.
and it had an ending? (Score:2)
Re:what I want to know.... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:what I want to know.... (Score:2)
No, I was not at the lecture. I am sure it would have been interesting though, if only to compare his speaking style with his writing style.
His stories don't come to a conclusion. They stop. Alternately, he gets less and less descriptive until he simply isn't writing anymore.
I hope it's shorter than Crypto... (Score:2)
TWW
Re:I hope it's shorter than Crypto... (Score:2)
The biggest complaint of his books is he doesn't know how to end. You're reading along and then the book ends. It's far too sudden.
Not his best (Score:2, Insightful)
I actually abandoned it about 3/4 of the way through, finding it, as you said, just too long for the content and a little silly.
One of my biggest complaints about SnowCrash and Diamond Age is that he starts with great characters and premises and then crashes them into these global apocalyptic endings that are a bit ludicrous.
Re:I hope it's shorter than Crypto... (Score:2)
Funny how different people react to Stephenson's books. I found the first part of Snow Crash brilliant, the rest tedious, and wasn't really able to make it through the rest of his books - they seemed uninspired and arbitrary.
That being said, I read Cryptonomicon pretty much cover-to-cover in a week or so. I though the story hung together *much* better than in any of his previous works. The covergent story arcs were both pretty interesting (the WWII business, esp. with Goto Dengo, much more so), and alt
Re:I hope it's shorter than Crypto... (Score:2)
Well, Cryptonomicon isn't SF, where "story" is the only thing important. Really, outside genre paperbacks (like SF, mystery, and romance -- the descendants of the 1920's pulps), "story" is pretty unimportant compared to style and mood, just like modern art isn't about making a photographic quality painting of Aunt Edna, but rather a study of form and color.
Re:I hope it's shorter than Crypto... (Score:2)
Just because a story is set in the past doesn't mean that it isn't sci fi. Every future has a past and to find out how you get to that future you have to study the past. You could say that books like Crytonomicon are the history of our future
Will it have a good ending? (Score:4, Insightful)
In Snow Crash, The Diamond Age and Cryptonomicon there was a sense of something epic building all the way through that didn't really pay off. More of shame because he spins such an excellent yarn, and his writing is very engaging. But don't (please) pop the balloon just to bring the book to a conclusion.
Re:Will it have a good ending? (Score:2)
Re:Will it have a good ending? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Will it have a good ending? (Score:2, Funny)
Naturally! The new books are part of what he's calling the Baroque Cycle, so he's just obeying the old edict:
"If it ain't Baroque, don't finish it."
Re:Will it have a good ending? (Score:2)
How's the editing this time around? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:How's the editing this time around? (Score:2)
Re:How's the editing this time around? (Score:2)
No wonder it compresses so well.
So don't be whinging to me about a missing "o". :)
How many times have you reported errors? (Score:2)
I don't expect much in the way of correct spelling, good grammar, and typos here on slashdot, and I make plenty of these mistakes myself. But when I'm paying north of $20 for a hardback book, like Cryptonomicon, I really expect to see the work of a professional editor. This book was filled with typos and even spell-checker kinds of errors (e.g. cannon vs canon).
Its rare to find a book without at least half a dozen typos, spelling errors or bad typesetting. And yet for all the years I've been reading, I'
Re:How's the editing this time around? (Score:2, Informative)
If you want to tell me about typographical errors in Cryptonomicon, thank you, but don't bother. I am aware that the book has many typos. The publisher and I are trying to fix as many as we can in a subsequent printing.
And from his Crytonimicon FAQ [well.com]:
12. Why does the perl script on p. 480 have funny-looking line breaks?
The printed novel is one of several distribution media for the Solitaire perl script, a
Grammar nitpicking (Score:2)
A spell checker would not catch that error. "Cannon" and "canon" are both legitimate English words. Read more here [bartleby.com].
Re:Grammar nitpicking (Score:2)
That's the point -- there was a point in the book where one was used where the other should have been (I forget which). Any reasonable editor would have caught the error, but it looked to me like the book was just run through a spell-checker and sent to the printer.
Re:Grammar nitpicking (Score:2)
I'm looking forward to the book, nonetheless.
From what I hear... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:From what I hear... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:From what I hear... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:From what I hear... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:From what I hear... (Score:2)
Neal Stephenson's short fiction (Score:3, Informative)
BTW, this book is the first book of three in Baroque Cycle, and they'll be released at six month intervals. So says HarperCollins.
Re:Neal Stephenson's short fiction (Score:2, Interesting)
stephenson keynote in june (Score:4, Informative)
Better a "cycle" than an immense tome (Score:3, Insightful)
1. The "period-ness" of the novel may surpass the "geek-ness." This is a tad disappointing.
2. I'm rather indifferent to the genealogical links between these characters and Cryptonomicon's. I mean, the characters in Cryptonomicon were pretty good, but it's not as if they were so fabulously conceived that I said "Goddamn, I wish I could read an entire cycle of books about their ancestors!" But Stephenson obviously has affection for them, so whatever helps him write is okay by me.
3. I also suspect the idea of a "cycle" of books arose from his experience writing (and attempting to end) Cryptonomicon. I suppose it's easier to write an ending if it needn't be the ultimate ending. And also, if he found himself generating more than a thousand pages once again, it was probably better to partition them into several volumes and write as much as wanted, rather than form the immense tome that Cryptonomicon became and be forced to cut the story off somewhat abrupty.
Re:Better a "cycle" than an immense tome (Score:2)
NS's books that ive read so far (zodiac, snow crash, the diamond age, cryptonomicon) all either take place in the past/present or the not-far-but-not-near future (ok, diamond age is pretty far future), seeing what effect the data haven from cryptonomicon would have on the hypoth
Question RE: Stephenson and Gibson (Score:2, Interesting)
My question is, is Idoru considered to be among Gibson's best work? If not, what's the best introduction to his style?
Re:Question RE: Stephenson and Gibson (Score:2)
My local bookstore's taking ages to get Pattern Recognition in stock, but apparently William Gibson's back on form. Go try it out - you might like it more than Idoru.
Also, of course, Idoru was the second in a trilogy, and you might have unknowingly had problems following the plot...check this [antonraubenweiss.com] out for mo
Re:Question RE: Stephenson and Gibson (Score:2)
Male or female bike messengers? Or is it just the smell on the saddles? lol
Re:Question RE: Stephenson and Gibson (Score:2)
On its own, I imagine a reader would be somewhat lost.
As a whole, I think the trilogy is stellar.
Re:Question RE: Stephenson and Gibson (Score:2)
Re:Question RE: Stephenson and Gibson (Score:2)
I really like the scenery Gibson paints in Neuromancer and Count Zero, but I have read most of his works (not All Tomorrows Parties or Difference Engine, or the newest one he was working on) and I enjoyed all of them.
Movie treatments (Score:2)
'New Rose Hotel', also a story from BC, was also movified. Don't waste the rental fee.
Re:Question RE: Stephenson and Gibson (Score:2)
The Gibson story I most enjoyed was "Johnny Mnemonic". (Don't bother with the lame movie though) I might not have liked it as much if I hadn't already met Molly in Neuromancer.
Besides that there's more good stuff in Burning Chrome if you like short stories. For novels I'd go with the cannonical answer of Neuromancer, Count Zero (2 out of 3 plotlines anyway), and Mona Lisa Overdrive. Actually, I thought he was coasting a bit in Mona, rehashing the same themes and charachters fr
The sky is falling! (Score:2, Funny)
Heresy!
lone genius I.S.O. editor (Score:4, Insightful)
In spite of all this criticism, I do enjoy his works.
Re:lone genius I.S.O. editor (Score:2)
s/too hash/too harsh/
s/UseNet pos/UseNet post/
On the other hand, at least you don't have to pay for my far from perfect wordsmithery.
Re:lone genius I.S.O. editor (Score:2)
Re:lone genius I.S.O. editor (Score:2)
Re:lone genius I.S.O. editor (Score:2)
Re:lone genius I.S.O. editor (Score:2)
Shucks (Score:3, Funny)
And here I sit, out of Monet.
Baroque of course, from trying to keep up with all the excellent books by David Drake (Hammers Slammers fame)
Can you tell me where the waves are? (Score:2, Funny)
http://www.quiksilver.com/
You know, water, sand, sun and all that outdoors stuff.
I did some work for him on this book (Score:5, Informative)
Neal's a pretty sharp guy but he outsources a lot of his research to proffesionals (makes sense) and has several staff people help him put the pieces together, as it were.
I offered my services as part of the FTEST (final tech editing service team) but Neal didn't want a computer pundit as much as he was looking for science pundits. Ah well, at least now I'm in his rolodex and hopefully I'll get more chances to work with him.
Warmest regards,
--Jack
Re:I did some work for him on this book (Score:2)
about crypto's length (Score:4, Insightful)
Imagine my suprise when, two year later, I picked up the book and decided to read through it again. I can't believe how much I missed the first time through. Sure, not all of it has everything to do with the storyline, but it's all entertaining, and quite funny in many places.
The best example I can (sorta) remember is when the younger Waterhouse is at the estate of his newly deceased grandmother, and all the relatives are trying madly to get the best inheritance. Waterhouse devises a formula that gets him what he wants. The whole scene had very little to do with the storyline, but it was great to read, and I'm glad he put it in there.
If you want short and to the point, go see a movie. Also, you dont know long and drawn out unless you've read the unabridged "Les Miserables."
Re:about crypto's length (Score:3, Informative)
The scene (in which Randy's older relatives determine who gets what family heirloom by taking each piece and laying it on a huge x-y / sentimental-monetary value axis) lets the reader know just how the nerdiness seen in L.P. Waterhouse (the grandfather, inventor of the computer) is 'genetically' carried down to Randy (hacker extraordinaire) via his older relatives (mathematicians and scientists, all).
But more importantly (if y
The preview (phew! what a relief) (Score:2, Insightful)
Fortunately, the preview of the book isn't written like that. Last thing I want to do is slug through another 800 pages of "picnicks" and other arbitrary 18th century capitalization and spelling choices. At least Pynchon didn't al
Re:The preview (phew! what a relief) (Score:2)
I've heard a lot of people say this, so I tried to read Gravity's Rainbow.
I had to give up for a bit. It was like reading Neal Stephenson while drunk. Very, very drunk. Hit on your Henry Rollins-lookalike coworker's sister while your wife is standing in the same room drunk.
yeah, I just finished rereading Gravity's Rainbow (Score:2)
Cool...time to start pumping iron (Score:2)
I'm about 200 pages from the end of Cyrptonomicon and have really enjoyed it. I was surprised at first at the lack of sci-fi stuff, but Neal is such a good writer I don't miss it at all.
A pitty Gen. D McArthur won't be in the new one - I love the way his character is written.
Great! (Score:2)
When NS is on a roll, he's in the same league with Mark Twain, and that's saying something.
Example - his chapter in Crypto regarding the Vickers gun and the huge buzz saw.
HOWEVER - his endings blow, and some plot threads don't stand up.
Example - Diamond Age where the engineer writes/creates the computer book to train little girls. Where'd HE get the writing power to do that? Also, political correctness is evident, where's the book to train little boys?
Re:Umm... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Umm... (Score:2, Informative)
He seems to like dry humor, irony, mystical experiences, sex , and underdogs.
Not necessarily in that order.
Re:Umm... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Umm... (Score:3, Informative)
don't forget The Big U (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Umm... (Score:5, Informative)
IMHO one of the few authors bothering (or able) to extrapolate cutting edge technology and concepts.
-------------
Re:Don't ya just love it... (Score:5, Insightful)
eh (Score:5, Insightful)
Given the tools available to you [google.com], there isn't really room to complain about not having heard of someone or something.
It is better to be silent, and be thought a fool, than to speak and remove all doubt.
Re:eh (Score:2)
Um, who is William Gibson? No, really. I have read Cryptonomicon, but I have not herd of Gibson.
really? (Score:2)
W Gibson is credited w/ describing/definig a great deal of the characteristics of cyberpunk. He's written a number of books, with Neuromancer generally considered the most important. If you like sci-fi or just technology, check his stuff out. Get Neuromancer and read it and keep reminding yourself that he wrote it 20 years ago.
Google turned up this academic jewel [wsu.edu].
Re:really? (Score:2)
Re:Don't ya just love it... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Don't ya just love it... (Score:2)
This obviously isn't as "big," so what the hell is this about and why should I care.
Have you ever heard of this little thing called Google? You can type in phrases and stuff and they will (usually) bring back a list of websites about that phrase. You should try it sometimes. For those of us who know who he is and love all of his works, this was great news and I'm really happy that I didn't also have to read a short history of his works
Obscure like...? (Score:2, Insightful)
Number of Linux users as of today (source: the Linux counter, http://counter.li.org/): 134107
Sales figures of Cryptonomicon, as of 3/19/01 (source Publisher's Weekly (http://publishersweekly.reviewsnews.com), sorry figures are so old, I don't have time to search for new ones):116,330
Yep. I agree. We ought to cover Star Trek and The Matrix, and not obscure stuff like Linux and Neal Stephenson. That stuff is for nerds!
Re:Enoch again? (Score:5, Interesting)
I knew that wasn't a plot hole.
Interesting indeed.
Re:Enoch again? (Score:2)
Now, Rudy appears to unsurprised at Root's reappearance later, hinting that he might know something peculiar about him. In the quote ab
Re:Enoch again? (Score:2)
Re:Enoch again? (Score:5, Interesting)
.
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m (lame junk filter)
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
x
y
z
.
It might be possible that we are talking about Enoch Root, not only a relative with the same name, but the same person who appears on Cryptonomicon. It's been hinted a few times in several places, Cryptonomicon included. Stephenson himself said that there's a "SciFi" turn in Cryptonomicon which will become more evident in Quicksilver.
Re:Enoch again? (Score:3, Insightful)
Perhaps that hints at this interesting theory, too?
Re:Enoch again? (Score:3, Insightful)
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m (yeah, damned lameness filter)
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
x
y
z
.
I'm hoping that you are refering to what I think you are referring to. In crypto, during the WWII timeline, Enoch root dies. Shaftoe and a surgeon they yanked out of his house are there when it happens. But, in the "present" timeline Enoch turns out to be Waterhouse's cell mate.
This confused the hell out of me when I first read it.
So, are you saying it's possible that Enoch is something more ephemeral?
Re:Enoch again? (Score:3, Interesting)
Presumably the Waterhouse and Shaftoe characters are ancestors of the characters in Cryptonomicon. Whether "Enoch" is an ancestor to Root in Crypto, or is (ahem) something entirely different remains to be seen.
Re:Enoch again? (Score:2)
Well, there was certainly a fair bit of indication that Enoch in Crypto wasn't quite... normal... and even in this brief excerpt there's a line that could be read to mean the same.
I'm willing to see where he's going with this, but rather wary at the same time. Is a Lazarous Long type character really necessary?
Re:The Big U (Score:2)
Re:Forget that crap, read: (Score:2)
morning not remembering anything and feeling
dirty...
Au contraire, I believe you're confusing these [sba.gov] with these [in.gov].