First of all, this
is a long book. A VERY long book. As in, 1130 pages. Every one of
which I enjoyed.
So if
you're into cryptography, computers, World War II history,
submarines, the Philippines, or engineering, you'll love this book.
And even if you are only interested in one or two of those things,
and know little of the others, you'll still
enjoy the story (i.e. I know some WWII history and a little bit about
the Phillipines during the Spanish-American War and beyond, but all I
know about computers and cryptography is what happened to stick in my
mind when people have tried to explain it to me).
The
story itself is fast-paced and entertaining, beginning as three
separate stories (two taking place during WWII, one during 1999), all
of which converge by the end. The three men at the center of each
story--Robert Shaftoe, Lawrence Waterhouse, and Randy Waterhouse--are
faced with unconventional tasks, including writing and breaking
codes, tricking the Axis powers into believing/not believing that
certain codes are broken, and unearthing old codes to find a massive
treasure buried by the Japanese in the Philippines at the end of the
war. Alan Turing (yes, that
Alan Turing) plays a central role in the novel, exchanging ideas with
Lawrence Waterhouse about how one might build a digital computer. And
then there's Enoch Root, the ex-priest who spans the entire timeline
of the novel, an enigmatic character who almost acts like a muse or
sounding board for the main characters. And
even with all of the bloody battles, and long dissertations on
cryptographic systems or engineering plans, Stephenson's characters
take the time to fall in love with smart, adventurous women.
For me,
reading Cryptonomicon
was like reading Stephen Hawking's A Brief History of Time
or Brian Greene's The Fabric of the Cosmos-
for long stretches, I had ABSOLUTELY NO IDEA what the writer was
talking about. None. Zip. Nothin'. But the parts that I did
understand gave me a general impression of each writer's point, and
with enough explaining on their part, I'd start to make some
breakthroughs (in Cryptonomicon,
this happened for me during the discussion of information theory).
I highly recommend
this vast historico-mathematic mammoth of a novel, if only because
the characters, for all of their flaws, aspire to noble causes and
become better people because of it.
Hello, I found your blog through Estella's Revenge. Actually, I just found Estella's blogs and other social media today.
ReplyDeleteI have two blogs, but at http://impressionsinink.blogspot.com is where I review historical fiction, military, Holocaust, British history, mystery, and other genres.
I just joined your blog and look forward to reading your posts.
Have a great day!