The final, delicious volume
5
By bradmoreso
Full disclosure: I am an incurable fan of Stephenson's work, and in particular, the books he has published which feature the fictional family lines of Waterhouse & Shaftoe. When I was reading "Cryptonomicon," for example, I carried it with me everywhere and would read while stopped at red lights while driving my car.
This trilogy was at least as fascinating, although the thrills were more distributed, as befits its comparatively greater breadth and depth. I confess to having had difficulty starting this volume -- I think it was my impatience with the conversations of the female royalty -- but this third attempt has yielded more than every other work of his combined.
Stephenson aptly employs his usual devices, viz the weaving of diverse threads which are so neatly knotted as the story begins to run short on pages, as well as a few new, or at least, hitherto undetectable ruses to construct a ripping, if elongated yarn. Having read the novel which succeeds this one (Anathem), I discern a sort of evolution of style. I think our dear Neal has taken to dish cussing his work with those he respects, and we are the richer for it.
I recommend that you read this book, especially uif you do not like to study history. If you do enjoy history, you have either already read it, or you have yet to discover it. This book, unlike the others in The Baroque Cycle, hews more closely to 17th- and 18th-century England than the rest. It draws upon the other two, but does not require their content to be enjoyed.
Make certain that you can comfortably read while stopped at red lights.
Living in Stephenson's World...
5
By Kurt Towler
...Is a great way to pass a winter or two. It seems that it took me a couple years to finish the Baroque Cycle, but it allowed me time to really internalize these stories. I even read Anathem in between these three stories.
I regularly re-read Neal's work, but it opens a window into a world I remember from school science classes that I need to explore again before re-reading. Hooke, monads, alchemy, Newton, calculus, biology, and all these nascent sciences that gave rise to a modern sensibility - really amazing. This story reminds me of my own discovery of science itself, that there is a rich body of science and scientists and we just need to give it some context. All these people lived within a time and context that is worth knowing. Thanks, Neal.