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Most helpful customer reviews
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars
erudite fiction,
By I ain't no porn writer (author, "Crippled Dreams") - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Confusion: Volume Two Of The Baroque Cycle (Hardcover)
This is a slow-paced narrative, without a clear straightforward plot, which requires more reading patience that your average historical novel. But the style is rich and the characters are engaging and very well-developed. The reader will be swept away by an adventurous tale of slavery, freedom, and fortune-hunting, among other storylines interwoven in this ambitious work. Indeed, this literary tale might not satisfy readers of more lightweight commercial fiction, but Neal Stephenson is a great stylist whose writing will appeal to the scholar in you.David Rehak
5.0 out of 5 stars
"The Two Towers" of The Baroque Cycle,
By
This review is from: The Confusion: Volume Two of The Baroque Cycle (Paperback)
Stephenson follows up his marvelously detailed and entertaining "Quicksilver" with a continuation worthy of its predecessor. Jack Shaftoe, one of the three protagonists, drives his portion of the plot forward with swashbuckling abandon, travelling from his enslavement in Africa, to his daring heist of Solomonic Gold from a Spanish ship at Bonanza, to the markets in Egypt to try to sell this gold, to India where he begins as a near untouchable, working as a "feeder" of bloodsucking insects and ends up with a minor peerage. Finally, on to Japan to trade and then to the Americas, where he is double-crossed and imprisoned because of the treachorous Jesuit, Edouard de Gex. Scores are settled, new ones are tallied, and Jack takes it all with his deadpan humour, aplomb, and fatalism. Will he ever see England or his fair Eliza again?Meanwhile, Daniel Waterhouse attempts to save Isaac Newton from the influence of Fatio, a Swiss sycophant and minor savant, who has encouraged Newton's descent into madness and continued obsession with Alchemy, to the detriment of Natural Philosophy. Waterhouse, torn between the doctrine his father left him with and the chance to change the course of history through politics (yikes!), economics (say it ain't so!), and science (egad!), hopes to reconcile his life of intrigue with his Puritanical upbringing. Eliza continues to dabble in matters financial, using her oeconomic skills to gain favour in various courts. She befriends Caroline, a German princess, and Caroline's mother--not knowing that they will be in line for the crown of England. Stephenson's detail, wit, and ability to craft a captivating story (albeit a long one!) shine once again in this novel, which adequately sets up Volume 3 ("The System of the World") and makes for a promising conclusion indeed.
5.0 out of 5 stars
Absolutely Briliant,
By Jotham Kinder (Boston. Because this will be the year the Red Sox win the Series.) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Confusion: Volume Two Of The Baroque Cycle (Hardcover)
This is a beast of a book, wild, ferocious and full of mystery. One of those mysteries is the origin of the modern world. Using the medium of fiction, Stephanson strips away layer after layer of recieved wisdom and shows us how a few extrodinary people, and a great deal of ordinary ones, invented the modern notions of finance, banking, credit, trade, stock markets, globalization and the little matter of science. Yes, these people invented science as we know it. And Stephanson will show you the world they inhabited, page after page, untill you feel that you are amongst the greatest minds Europe ever produced.Which is not to say that The Confusion is all about dry academic discourse. The first page of the book finds Jack Shafto miraculusly cured of syphilis, wandering confusedly on a beach while a fifteen hundred gun salute is fired in the honor of the Caliph. From there, we are engaged in one of the best travelouges, adventure stories and general assembiledges of all out mayhem ever collected in one volume. In the spirit of equal oppertunities, this is not strictly a lads book. Equal time is given to Eliza, a former Harem virgin,and by her own wits and courage created a duchess in two nations. Also, by the end of the book, a mother of three. Now, this is a long book, and jam packed with details. Like the art which insipred it's name, the book contains ever increasing levels of ornimentation and detail, built on mathimatically and geometricly pure lines. Well, curves actually. Quite often, the reader can become lost in the welth of images and imagry. Not to worry. Stephanson provides both Newton and Liebinitz to explain the nature of those curves and ornimentation. Even if the titans occasionally disagree.
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