this post was submitted on 01 Apr 2024
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Neal Stephenson
I still rate Snow Crash as one of the most enjoyable reads.
Whatever you may think of it, it's a non stop ride. I even enjoyed the audiobook fairly recently which has got to be getting on for 20 years since the book.
I must get his more recent works.
This book is one of those that just lives in my head, like its scenes and images pop into view whenever I'm thinking of sci-fi, especially cyberpunk.
Snow Crash and Cryptonomicon are among my favorites. I'm also a bit of a sucker for the techno-futuristic theme of the former, and echno-enthusiasm theme of the latter. Growing up as an IT geek in the 90's made a lot of it strike a home run with me.
Rise and Fall of the D.O.D.O. is pretty cool. It's written as an epistolary of letters, diary entries, corporate memos, and voicemails, which gives it an interesting and fun angle.
Sounds interesting, thanks!
I had to scroll way too far for Stephenson. He has some ups and downs (as all creators do), but some of his novels are mind blowingly awesome.
Diamond Age is my all time favourite (although I read it just one time as I do with all books). In the current age of AI it is very relevant. If nano technology and AI will progress we'll maybe head into the depicted scenario and I hope I'm still alive then.
Cryptonomicon, Anathem, The Baroque Cycle are wild rides and masterpieces too. Anathem was a bit hard to get into but it got really exciting after the first 300 pages (of ~1000) or so.
Gotta say, every time I go out and look at the moon I canβt help but wonder what would happen if it somehow exploded. Then I find myself wondering why Iβm not in an asteroid-mining ship and end up questioning all my life choices.
N. K. Jemison