I'm afraid I just like Neal Stephenson, uncritically, although Quicksilver has been staring at me accusingly since Christmas.
Me too, except I haven't even bought Quicksilver yet. (My "hardback vs paperback" rule for authors is entirely dependent on which format I first bought them in, so that they fit nicely together on the bookshelf.* And unfortunately for Neal, I first read Snow Crash in mass market paperback, so QS's just gonna have to wait.)
*Yes, this rule does ignore the fact that I've been out of bookshelf space and stacking things on the floor for over a year now, unemployed and therefore unable to buy new shelves even as I continue to buy books. But at least the floor-stacks look nice.
I saw Steven Brust's latest in the bookstore the other day and was intrigued. From the back cover, it looked a bit like a cross between
Firefly
and
Hitchhiker's Guide.
I've never read any Brust, though, and am too poor to buy it at the moment anyway. A definite library request item.
Also, my father loaned me
Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight,
which I'm really looking forward to. Didn't someone else here read it recently?
My problem with buying Quicksilver in paperback is the size of the thing. The paperback of Cryptonomicon was roughly the dimensions of a brick.
I loved Cryptonomicon, despite the fact that Stephenson couldn't write a solid ending if his life depended on it. It was just too much fun, and I'm so looking forward to Quicksilver. I found O Jerusalem to be the straw that broke my camel's back, and won't be reading Laurie King anymore.
Anyone else board read William Gibson's Pattern Recognition? Despite the technical inaccuracies (he seems to think you can easily email vid files!), I thought he really nailed the social dynamics of an international posting board full of obsessed focussed, occasionally anonymous, individuals. It ended badly, but I enjoyed a lot of it, and read it quickly.
Next up is probably a reread of Lirael, since I finally picked up Abhorsen in paperback.
Just out of curiosity, Consuela, why didn't you like O Jerusalem?
I read
Pattern Recognition
last year, but don't remember much. The only impression that remains is "Better than
Idoru,
but otherwise more of the same."
I think Gibson peaked with the
Burning Chrome
short stories and
Mona Lisa Overdrive.
Virtual Light is my Gibson of choice. It is one of those books I have a real absolute love for. He created a world that I understood how it came to be. Might be time for a reread.
and seconding Davids' recomendation of Synners.
I have not yet read Cryptonomicon or Quicksilver . DH keeps wearing out our copies of the first. Unfortunately I seem to have a fear of big books right now. Too Mnay books are takeing me oo long to read. Which means they really aren't that good ( Fairy Godmother ) but just interesting and easy enough to read that I keep going. big books that I am expecting to enjoy I Keep putting off. I recently realized that I though it was me - not reading like I used to . Actually , it is just too many bad books. and an inability to tell if it is me or the book.
I loved Cryptonomicon, despite the fact that Stephenson couldn't write a solid ending if his life depended on it.
I'm telling you, Zodiac has a solid ending. Honest. I was shocked.
It was. Tight, crisp, and totally unlike his other stuff.