Reading Category, Snow Crash
New category here on Technical Ramblings: Reading, for things I’m reading, plan to read, want to read, think you should read, am glad I never read, etc. For the most part, I’ll just mention books here unless they’re technical related, since this is tending to be my “technical” weblog compared to my “personal” LiveJournal.
Right now, I’m reading Snow Crash, by Neal Stephenson. Although this may surprise some of you, I’ve never read anything by the author before. I had never even heard of him until just recently. About a month ago, when MS announced that an image-rendering exploit in their code made it possible to hijack your machine by using a specially formatted buddy image on MSN, someone on /. responded with “Already been done, see Snow Crash.” At the time, I paid the commenter no mind: but later that day, I discovered that I had a copy of Snow Crash sitting on my bookshelf. I set it aside at the time, but grabbed it again later, and started reading it over the weekend.
Snow Crash is a book describing a somewhat surrealistic future, in the relatively near future: it describes kids who are only two generations down from WW2 vetrans, so it can’t be more than a dozen or two years in the future. It’s an interesting world: where governments have stopped being national things and instead become small, suburb level regions controlled by all kinds of specific franchises, from the Mob to Mr. Lee’s Greater Hong Kong. There are a million vague edges throughout the story: for example, the US Government still exists, but only in tiny pockets, and there’s no indication of what control it actually has over anything.
The book fits right into the niche of books that I just “can’t put down” – where a lot of vague areas are left in the plot, but the level of detail is incredible. The description of the creation of the Metaverse, something like a visual version of the present day Internet, goes into the creators – the ACM – and the way that it was created, the size of it, how it works, and more. Descriptions of single rooms take up multiple pages, while the development of the “real” world as a whole is left almost entirely to the reader’s imagination, with minor tips dribbled throughout.
I’m not quite done yet – I’ve been reading it for two days straight, but forgot it at work tonight – but thus far it’s been an extremely entertaining book, drawing me away from IRC and the computer in general, something that very few books succeed in doing.
Other books I’ve read recently: Jumper and The Runaway Jury. The first was a reread, the second a first time.
March 2nd, 2005 at 3:14 am
Snow Crash is an excellent book. I read it about a year ago. Enjoy it!
Another great book I recommend is The Bug by Ellen Ullman.
(BTW how’s the Symbian Python flickr app. going? Looking forward to seeing the source.)
March 2nd, 2005 at 5:17 am
Oh, it’s one of my favourites – mafia pizza delivery, swordsmanship and ancient languages. Enjoy!
April 3rd, 2005 at 5:38 pm
Fantastic book actually. Think I’ll pick it up again after reading this.
May 14th, 2005 at 4:54 pm
Just passing by… got here by means of Python and Symbian. Now that you’ve read Stephenson you may want to check out “Cryptonomicon.” Not quite as Sci-Fi as “Snow-Crash,” but just as entertaining (if not more) and full of detail, a great book.