Rating:  Summary: Brilliant writing Great concept An exciting ride to the end Review: After reading this book I just have to write a review about it.This is one of the best books I have ever read.There are no boring moments and the shift between the characters of YT and Hiro are excellent.If you want a book that you will read more than once or even if you are lookin for a great book to read look no further than Snow Crash
Rating:  Summary: Wow. Review: This book just plain rocks. The characters are not only Awesome- with a capital A- but believable. The plot is fantastic. The world is intense and practically real. This is one of the best books I've ever read.
Rating:  Summary: One good concept makes one good book Review: Snow Crash is a good bit of brain candy, that had potential to be excellent if Stephenson could only have decided who he really wanted to please. The future world he set up melds some really fun projections from modern social trends with a plot device that brings an ancient and alien social control mindset into conflict with virtual realities. Yeah, Gibson did voodoo gods in the Net, but this is a conspiracy to use a whole worldview, aimed through the net, to sabotage a whole society of computer users. It's a good plot and a classic cyperpunk set, with a hacker hero and assorted sidekicks. And its very well done. Pity so much time is wasted on working the movie angle; what with stuffing a lot of gratuitous blood and sex into his complex and elegant plot, Stephenson doesn't have time to set up much in the way of motive or clarification. We end up waiting for him to tell us what's happening, instead of following right along with him. Unfortunately, this means the plot ends up looking like something he stuck on at the last minute to give the book a little pseudo-intellectual appeal. Next time? I hope he can decide whether he wants to go for the science fiction market or the movie deal, before the final edit.
Rating:  Summary: Good beginning, weak middle, okay ending Review: This is a good summer time read. The lead characters are interesting, although the sinister "Raven" is not well defined. The middle of the book expands ad nauseum on an idea that should have taken far fewer pages. The ending of the book looks like it is begging for a sequel. All in all, this is an interesting book, and would be a very interesting book if 100 pages were trimmed out of it.
Rating:  Summary: Dissapointing piece of cyber-pulp Review: After having friends reccomend this book/author to me I went out and bought it. I wish I hadn't. This book is nothing more than a holywoodized piece of cyber trash. It could easily make it to the silver screen as the violent content is extreme and unecessary and the plot is pseudo-intellectual.It is well written and hard to put down, I'll give it that, but it feels upon reflection as though the author had re-written an archeology paper from university adding extreme violence and technology to sell it to the mindless consumer drones of generation X America. Of all the 'cyber-punk' novels I have read this has the most graphic depecition of violence and also has the highest 'body-count'. [The archeological sub-text is far more interesting to me and I wish he had spent a little more time on the explanation of the use of 'me' and it's relevance in mesopotanian society.] Books I recommend, far superior in concepts and content, are; "Neuromancer" by William Gibson,[most cool book of the 80's]. "A scanner darkly" by Philip K. Dick [know Blade runner?], and "Vurt" by Jeff Noon[the 90's best new cyber-punk author. READ IT. It is inspirational.]
Rating:  Summary: Snow crash is a computer-geek's wet dream Review: The first time I picked up Snow Crash I read it through within a week, and then again the next week etc etc, and started praising it as my most favorite book ever, and havn't stopped since. I have, however, given the book to others and get mixed reviews. If you're a nut about Computers, Programming, Gaming etc, you'll love it to bits and read it at least 3 times. If not, you'll understand why our bunch like it so much, but will consider it a second-rate piece of literature. Neal is easily my favorite author, and his other books are great too.
Rating:  Summary: Loud! Review: Though technicaly interesting, I thought the book followed the old rock and roll motto: if you can't play it good, play it loud. It was loud. I thoroughly enjoyed parts of the book. I found it too raunchy for my taste. I also find that authors who re-define facts, and draw their historical/technical advice seemingly from the detractors and critics more than a bit ANOYING. I would best sum it up by saying I forced my way through parts of the book to experience "the definitive cyper-punk novel", and in the end threw the book away rather than pass it on.
Rating:  Summary: mindless entertainment Review: This book was goofy and dated the minute it hit the presses, but as long as you turn off your brain, it's pleasant enough.
Rating:  Summary: Snow Crash makes Neuromancer look like Dr. Seuss Review: Yeah, I thought cyber-punk was quaint. Snow Crash proved me wrong. I was hooked from the first few pages. Stephenson doesn't waste any time "building" the story. He just throws you into the deep end of this frenetic world. The "world" of Snow Crash is way too hip, way too cool; but Stephenson makes up for the "so cool" by keeping his tongue firmly planted in his cheek. You wouldn't think mixing violent action, religious mysticism and computer programming would work, but it does here, strangely. The only reason I gave it 4 instead of 5 stars is that some of the religious mumbo-jumbo was overly long and drawn out, making for a couple of painfully slow sections. (But even with that, I didn't feel that the book was "heavy" or "intellectual" in tone.) My favorite character is the teenaged skateboard courier - great heroine for a comic book series or a cartoon or movie.
Rating:  Summary: Good ambiance, OK substance Review: After reading a lot of other user reviews I can write a summary which also coincides with my personal opinion about this book. The ambience -- the setting of the book -- is a brilliantly, fully realized vision of the not-too-distant future where pizza delivery is all America can pride itself on and social interaction is defined by the Internet-meets-VR world of the Metaverse. It is delightfully cynical and very entertaining, and is the focus of the first third or so of text. The substance, however, is a convoluted plot dealing with hard-to-follow Sumerian myth that puts a lot of readers off. Personally, I like the idea that the technologically defined future can be so linked to the ancient past. But then the last third is a Hollywood-style shootout, and only a few patches of focus on ambience (I loved the chapter about the future of working for the Government!) appear. In short, great setup, but I would have preferred another plot to have taken place.
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