Rating:  Summary: This is how cyberpunk should be written Review: One hell of a book. I think its almost as good as neuromancer. Its not so damn serious its more like a rudy rucker book.
Rating:  Summary: read it Review: The first third of "Snow Crash" is so much fun and so bizarre, I was instantly hooked. The post-breakdown world he describes is at once surprising and familiar, and--a welcome change from other Bleak Future novels I've read--it is often laugh out loud funny. But after the initial setup, the book sadly fails to deliver. The librarian has lots of fascinating ideas, but I hate being on the receiving end of a lecture, and the librarian was a too-thinly disguised device to deliver a too-long lecture. And the dead-on sendup of contemporary Christians which Stephenson sets up in the first half of the novel starts to sound a little cloying in hindsight: how can you criticize a group for believing their tenuous interpretations of ancient myths are Truth when you are yourself proposing far more tenuous interpretations of ancient myths as Truth? Still, the first 150 pages of this novel are SO good, I recommend it highly. Just check first to see if your library has it before you plunk down your $6. (shhh, don't tell the amazon folks I said that!)
Rating:  Summary: It's really cool and I like it a lot Review: Well, I use to play Gemstone III all the time and when my best friend told me about this book, I said "Wow, what a cool book!". So I went out to the book store and bought it and right when I got home, I started reading...and I kept reading...for 5 hours. I was captivated! I read it so fast that within a week, I was reading it for my second time. Between this book and Gemstone III, I was in virtual heaven. I would just like to recomend this radical book to anyone who likes to sit at the computer and play Gemstone III or even someone who just plain loves books. Even my sister loved it and my friend Kevin, well, he didn't like it but he's not very cool anyways. I love this book! 10's across the board! YEAH!
Rating:  Summary: One hail of a good book Review: Shoo man, I red dis book and, well, let's just say I didn't put it down for a whole day. Dats pretty amazin' figerin I aint never red a cyberpunk book befor. I jus wanna say dat if you aint never red a cyberpunk book before, you need to read dis one. After I red dis great book, I red Neuromancer and it wasn't half as good as dis book.
I just wanna say I thank my creative writting teacher for introducin me to dis rad book. I won't say his name but he took da time to white out all da cuss words so we could read it. Thanks my creative writtin teacher.
One last thing. I really really love dis book and I recommend it to anyone who wants to read about hackers and stuff. Hiro is one bad butt character and Y.T. is really coo. Go out and buy it right now or when you get off da computer.
Rating:  Summary: It's a good book, but don't expect too much from it Review: The beginning of this book is unbelievable, if the first twenty or so pages do not hook you then forget about sci-fi literature altogether. However, Stephenson is not able to keep the incredible pace set in the beginning. Still, I think it deserves a read, if only for its believable portrayal of virtual reality.
Rating:  Summary: Simply a FUN book. You will have a blast! Review: After rating about 50 or so books on Amazon.com, I asked for recommendations of books that I might enjoy. The number one choice on the list was a book called "Headcrash". I went to the book description and began to read the reader reviews. Many of the reviews referred to another book known as "Snow Crash" that a few people seemed to like MORE than Headcrash. While browsing a local used book store for a copy of Headcrash, I came across a used copy of Snow Crash. (you still following me?) I bought it and started to read it. I am familiar with the cyberpunk universe from having an interest in computer and video games, but I've never really read anything officially labeled as cyberpunk. This was my first endeavor, and I was slightly afraid that I wouldn't enjoy a brooding post-apocalyptic atmosphere. Snow Crash immediately hooked me. The subtle and quirky sense of humor that permeates the work is what did it. The book seems like a cross between the Shadowrun universe and Douglas Adams. The main character's name is 'Hiro Protagonist' after all... 'Ford Prefect' anyone? Hiro carries a pair of Samurai swords and has business cards that innocently labels him as "The World's Greatest Swordfighter". The ideas presented in Snow Crash are just too cool. A few things we have seen before, but much of the book is inventive and original. Stephenson creates many little detailed near-futuristic technological gadgets that are incredibly cool. "Perhaps they'll listen to Reason." (wait until you get there!) The Rat Things are another. Great stuff! The plot drives the book in a non-overbearing way that doesn't force the reader to "pay attention" to every little detail in fear of losing the significance of some event later in the book. However, little tidbits of information are dropped here and there in the first half of the book that suddenly come into play later on... making the reader think, "Oh.. so THAT's what that was!" This provides the reader with feelings of discovery and satisfaction. This was one of those books that had me postponing other activities that I like to do, in order to read a "just a little more". As I was reading Snow Crash, there were many, many times when I started thinking of what an incredible movie this book would make. Read it. You'll love it.
Rating:  Summary: Wow! Review: This is one of the best sci-fi/cyberpunk novels out there (although the term "cyberpunk" marginally annoys me). Everybody has self-given, rock-star names, Newt Gingrich has his wish and gets his smaller government (although this goes beyond even Libertarians' veiws of small government), and I'll bet John Travolta won't be starring in the movie (L. Bob Fife is obviously a parody of L. Ron Hubbard, at least as the name goes). I especially liked how the novel had a huge break in the action for the language/biblical subplot (which is really the MAIN plot, if you at it just right). I thought the ending, contrary to what some people say, was GREAT. I'm glad there was NOT any hint of a romantic involvement between the main male and female characters, for a change. Beyond all that, the novel is exciting and hilarious. Now, there are some defects in this book, but they are minor compared to the quality of most of it. First, some of the tech (and apparently the history lesson) is BS. More importantly, the time period is bogus. Stephenson seems to realize this, and never states what year the novel is set. It obviously can't take place much farther in the future than 2010 or so, due to some characters (and their parents) war histories, yet the breakdown of society presented here requires much longer than that, say fifty years at least, IMHO. However, one can easily overlook these minor points and enjoy the rest of this book.
Rating:  Summary: Simply terrific! Review: From the opening paragraph, I knew this was going a be a wild ride of a book. Stephenson's mix of Sumerian mythology, computers, paranoia and a great sense of humor was a refreshing change from the other cyberpunk I've read. In my experience, a cyberpunk novel has all the humor of a train wreck, but Stephenson manages to avoid the Gibsonian doom and gloom and see the humor in the situations he writes about. Stephenson keeps the pace of the novel moving along nicely, even when he's busy explaining obscure Sumerian mythology (trust me, it's all relevant to the plot.) Overall, this an excellent, well written novel and I look forward to reading more of his work.
Rating:  Summary: Fun to read! Mindboggling! Satiric! Visionary! Review: Friend got Snow Crash as a gift. Looked in. Couldn't stop reading the first chapter. I had to give it back the same evening. Reluctantly! Bought it the next day! Back in '96 that is. I still consider it one of the most fun to read Sci-Fi novels up to date. The pace of the first few chapters is breathtaking. Leaves you craving for more, though at some times the plot isn't very transparent. Pretty witty. Some jokes took me completely by surprise. 'It costs a Trillion Dollars...` or so for example. Or the 'They will listen to REASON' phrase. You don't have to be a Sci-Fi fan to enjoy it! Lean back! Put on some danger sensitive sunglasses ! Let the adventure begin. You can be Y.T., or, if a male reader, even Hiro himself for a while. Enjoy the extrapolations of political and economic situations. Do not take it 100% serious. The future might be bleak enough. From certain angles, it surely has more than one, Snow Crash looks like the proverbial Cyberpunk Roleplaying Adventure with lots of action, probable and improbable ends, dark sneaky villains, desparate cast-out heroes and the like. I even took a liking in Raven, the dark mercenary/avenger par excellence. All in all a fast paced, word-inventing Tour de Force through a not so distant tomorrow. Would have rated it as a 10, but some explanations , endings of the plot are rather odd or at least not very well researched.
Rating:  Summary: Starts great, stays good, ends well Review: The best techno-novel I've read. Stephenson has a fantastic and entertaining writing style that would support any story. Luckily the plot is good too. The book swims in technodreams, but doesn't drown. I liked it much better than the fabled "Neuromancer".
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