NY - Oct 4, 2008
Called by some the first "post-cyberpunk" novel, it's got energy, humor and ideas to spare. Almost every page burns with a love of language, ...
3 mainstream media weighed in on a similar topic
16 Months Ago,
Macleans says
(in Macleans.ca - Read this book—Neal Stephenson’s Anathem)
If that the sort of question that interests you—and it is a fairly basic issue in formulating your view of the true nature of what Douglas Adams called Life, the Universe and Everything—then Stephenson has a novel for you. ...
17 Months Ago,
Houston Chronicle says
(in Anathem by Neal Stephenson)
United States -
Called by some the first "post-cyberpunk" novel, it's got energy, humor and ideas — a subtext on the link among viruses, language and religion — to spare. ...
18 Months Ago,
Los Angeles Times says
(in Neal Stephenson takes the long view)
CA -
Called by some the first "post-cyberpunk" novel, it's got energy, humor and ideas -- a subtext on the link among viruses, language and religion -- to spare. ...
| 1 | Fantasy Book Critic |
| 2 | The Wertzone |
| 3 | So Quoted |
| 4 | Zubon Book Reviews |
| 5 | ISCA |
| 6 | Sandstorm Reviews |
| 7 | Boing Boing |
| 8 | Hit and Run |
Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson Dracula by Bram Stoker Touchstone by Laurie R. King Crocodile On The Sandbank by Elizabeth Peters (re-read) The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society by Mary Ann Shaffer and Annie Barrows The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova
Sun, Jan 10 | from 50 Book Challenge