Books Free Download Snow Crash
Snow Crash 
Wow. Wow, wow, wow. I had thought that William Gibsons Neuromancer was the alpha male of the cyberpunk genre; the template upon which all others would be drawn. Turns out, Gibson was the prophet, but Stephenson was the barbarian, breaking ground with a riveting, relentless new age thriller. Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson is a wild trip. A fun conglomerate of Hunter S. Thompson, Philip K. Dick, Anthony Burgess and John Brunner, written 8 years after Neuromancer and 19 years before Ready Player One

My first cyberpunk book! I was told going into this that I was either going to love it or hate it. I didnt love it or hate it, I'm honestly not sure I understood a word of it! Snow Crash is a gamer's dream! I read Ready Player One a few years back and thought I could now handle Snow Crash however there are two major differences. Ready Player One is written for the mainstream and you're inside a virtual reality. Snow Crash is written for the gamers and you're inside the actual coding of a virtual
It had great world building, great concepts, and great satire, but story wise the last 20% completely falls apart. I was a little disappointed by the ending. Also, I had a hard time with the active voice used throughout this book. Reading it felt like a friend pitching a movie to me.The language-as-programming concept was terrific though, even though I think that Max Barry (obviously influenced by this book) wrote a much more compelling story using the same high concepts when he wrote Lexicon.
Cyberpunks next generation pretty much began here. Written by someone who -unlike William Gibson- actually knows computers, this anime in novel form is one of those rare SF books that is read by many non-SF readers. On a personal note, this is probably the only book Ill ever read whose main character is half black and half Japanese, just like me! When I first read it, I was working at a pizza place, just like the protagonist, and I actually got fired around the same time I got to the point of
If you know how to catch a ride, you can go places. Super entertaining ride through dystopia and pizza delivery (as if there was any real difference in the two), ancient Sumerian mythology, computer and religious viruses, hacker groups and some very strange and creepily familiar communities in Neal Stephensons Snow Crash! And that really is just the beginning. Absolutely loved the inventiveness (and here is my caveat) until at least the first half or three quarters mark. While I plan to reread
Neal Stephenson
Kindle Edition | Pages: 559 pages Rating: 4.03 | 224660 Users | 8762 Reviews

Point Books In Pursuance Of Snow Crash
Original Title: | Snow Crash ASIN B000FBJCJE |
Edition Language: | English |
Characters: | Hiro Protagonist, Y.T., Da5id Meier, Juanita Marquez, Dr. Emanuel Lagos, Uncle Enzo, L. Bob Rife, Dmitri "Raven" Ravinoff |
Setting: | United States of America |
Literary Awards: | Arthur C. Clarke Award Nominee (1994), British Science Fiction Association Award Nominee (1993), Grand Prix de l'Imaginaire for Roman étranger (1997), Prometheus Award Nominee for Best Novel (1993), Washington State Book Award (1993) Seiun Award 星雲賞 Nominee for Best Foreign Novel (1999) |
Narrative During Books Snow Crash
In reality, Hiro Protagonist delivers pizza for Uncle Enzo's CosoNostra Pizza Inc., but in the Metaverse he's a warrior prince. Plunging headlong into the enigma of a new computer virus that's striking down hackers everywhere, he races along the neon-lit streets on a search-and-destroy mission for the shadowy virtual villain threatening to bring about infocalypse. Snow Crash is a mind-altering romp through a future America so bizarre, so outrageous… you'll recognize it immediately.Itemize Out Of Books Snow Crash
Title | : | Snow Crash |
Author | : | Neal Stephenson |
Book Format | : | Kindle Edition |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 559 pages |
Published | : | August 26th 2003 by Spectra (first published June 1992) |
Categories | : | Nonfiction. Animals. Autobiography. Memoir. Biography. Classics |
Rating Out Of Books Snow Crash
Ratings: 4.03 From 224660 Users | 8762 ReviewsEvaluate Out Of Books Snow Crash
Did you ever have a kid at school who tried to appear smart and as the font of all knowledge by catching on to the tail-ends of things while listening to adults, absorbing some of it, and then spouting forth in front of an assembly of kids, his (or her, --let's be fair here) own regurgitation of what he had heard in the adult quarter, which would often make most of the other kids hang on to his/her every word simply because they themselves didn't have a clue what he was talking about?Well, withWow. Wow, wow, wow. I had thought that William Gibsons Neuromancer was the alpha male of the cyberpunk genre; the template upon which all others would be drawn. Turns out, Gibson was the prophet, but Stephenson was the barbarian, breaking ground with a riveting, relentless new age thriller. Snow Crash by Neal Stephenson is a wild trip. A fun conglomerate of Hunter S. Thompson, Philip K. Dick, Anthony Burgess and John Brunner, written 8 years after Neuromancer and 19 years before Ready Player One

My first cyberpunk book! I was told going into this that I was either going to love it or hate it. I didnt love it or hate it, I'm honestly not sure I understood a word of it! Snow Crash is a gamer's dream! I read Ready Player One a few years back and thought I could now handle Snow Crash however there are two major differences. Ready Player One is written for the mainstream and you're inside a virtual reality. Snow Crash is written for the gamers and you're inside the actual coding of a virtual
It had great world building, great concepts, and great satire, but story wise the last 20% completely falls apart. I was a little disappointed by the ending. Also, I had a hard time with the active voice used throughout this book. Reading it felt like a friend pitching a movie to me.The language-as-programming concept was terrific though, even though I think that Max Barry (obviously influenced by this book) wrote a much more compelling story using the same high concepts when he wrote Lexicon.
Cyberpunks next generation pretty much began here. Written by someone who -unlike William Gibson- actually knows computers, this anime in novel form is one of those rare SF books that is read by many non-SF readers. On a personal note, this is probably the only book Ill ever read whose main character is half black and half Japanese, just like me! When I first read it, I was working at a pizza place, just like the protagonist, and I actually got fired around the same time I got to the point of
If you know how to catch a ride, you can go places. Super entertaining ride through dystopia and pizza delivery (as if there was any real difference in the two), ancient Sumerian mythology, computer and religious viruses, hacker groups and some very strange and creepily familiar communities in Neal Stephensons Snow Crash! And that really is just the beginning. Absolutely loved the inventiveness (and here is my caveat) until at least the first half or three quarters mark. While I plan to reread
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