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This is the middle third of the volume originally published as The System of the World.

448 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 2003

12 people are currently reading
795 people want to read

About the author

Neal Stephenson

86 books28.8k followers
Neal Stephenson is the author of Reamde, Anathem, and the three-volume historical epic the Baroque Cycle (Quicksilver, The Confusion, and The System of the World), as well as Cryptonomicon, The Diamond Age, Snow Crash, and Zodiac. He lives in Seattle, Washington.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews
Profile Image for Darwin8u.
1,835 reviews9,039 followers
November 27, 2018
“For most of the day and night, time oppresses me. It is only when I am at work on the innards of a clock-or a lock-that time stops."
- Neal Stephenson, The Currency

description

Stephenson continues the last volume (The System of the World) of his Baroque trilogy with Book 7: "Currency". Like in Book 6, Solomon's Gold, "Currency" is primarily focused on Daniel Waterhouse trying to track down Jack Shaftoe (or Jack the Counterfeiter) who is making England's money financially dubious by messing with the Pyx (and hence putting ALL of England's currency at risk). Isaac Newton is helping Daniel Waterhouse track down Jack, both because as the Master of the Mint his reputation (and head) are at risk. But he is also motivated because as an alchemist he suspects that Jack Shaftoe has some of Solomon's gold. While all of this is going on Eliza is trying to help Princess Caroline survive the inevitable succession issues that will develop (including assassination attempts) once Queen Anne dies.

This has probably been the least "exciting" of the novels, but like any long work (eventually, the Baroque Cycle will clock in at about 2650 pages) there are bound to be parts of a work that float down the narrative current rather than quant down. Still, I did enjoy it.
Profile Image for Clif Hostetler.
1,282 reviews1,037 followers
August 8, 2011
This is book 7 of 8 in the Baroque Cycle (or the 2nd book in the third volume as first published). It takes place during during the year 1714 in London.

At the beginning of this book we learn what Jack the Coiner (a.k.a Jack Shaftoe) was up to in raiding the Tower in the previous book. He managed to cast doubt on the integrity of British money by tampering with an item of the mint's quality control system. (You'll need to read the book yourself to have it explained.) This is a serous challenge to Isaac Newton because he's in charge of the mint.

This all happens in the midst of the political unrest caused by the anticipated death of Queen Anne and the resulting battle between the Whigs and Tories over succession plans. Near the end of the book there are about a half dozen scenes happening simultaneously on an evening in London. A princess is in danger, there's sword fight, there's a riot, there's a fire, Newton has a meeting with his nemesis, young men with mohawk haircuts, and so on...

The book ends with the announcement that Queen Anne is dead. "Long live the King!" But which king?

In previous books of the Baroque Cycle the reader is informed (and reminded) that the purpose of Daniel Waterhouse's return to London from Massachusetts was to patch up the differences between Newton and Leibniz. They're both in London in 1714, but not much attention is paid to that particular problem in this book. There are more pressing issues to deal with.

One example of Neal Stephenson making this book match his historical research is the story of Sophia of Hanover dying in her garden after running for shelter from a rainstorm. In this book it is described how she dies in the arms of Caroline of Brandenburg-Ansbach, her granddaughter-in-law. I at first assumed this to be fictional flourish. But as best I can determine, it's a true story.

An example of the author's going off the deep end of fiction is in his description of a "logic mill" designed and constructed by Daniel Waterhouse. It is essentially an 18th Century digital computer programmed using punch cards made of small gold sheets. This I am sure to be pure fiction. I figure Stephenson included this in the story in order to tie it to Daniel's 20th century descendant in the book, Cryptonomicon, who participated in the development of the modern digital computer.

LINK TO Wikipedia article about the Baroque Cycle by Neal Stephenson.
LINK TO my review of Quick Silver (Bk. 1) by Neal Stephenson.
LINK TO my review of King of the Vagabonds (Bk. 2) by Neal Stephenson.
LINK TO my review of Odalisque (Bk. 3) by Neal Stephenson.
LINK TO my review of The Confusion (Bks. 4 & 5) by Neal Stephenson.
LINK TO my review of Solomon's Gold (Bk. 6) by Neal Stephenson.
LINK TO my review of System of the World (Bk. 8) by Neal Stephenson.
Profile Image for Jan.
1,254 reviews
December 20, 2013
While still charming, innovation or shortening is needed. The plot hardly makes progress and the reader is neither surprised or awed.
Profile Image for Steve Agland.
81 reviews13 followers
February 28, 2022
Not sure I've mentioned in my short reviews of each book in this series how much humor there is, which aims for that dry British style that suits the setting. This add a lot to the entertainment value. I noticed more the liberal use of dei ex machina to move the plot along and contrive more outlandish entanglements of the various characters. There is a scene in an opera house which which steers deliberately into high slapstick but I didn't mind. Feeling a little sad how close I am to the end of this enormous saga. No idea what to read next. Apparently Cryptonomicon is set in the same universe, centuries later. I read it 20 years ago, with quite a different brain in my head. Might be worth another go...
Profile Image for Gregory Eakins.
1,012 reviews25 followers
September 7, 2021
Much like Solomon's Gold, very little happens in this sequel. It really amounts to a history lesson on the development of the monetary system in England, hence the title, Currency.

Our favorite troublemaker, Jack Shaftoe, takes a back seat in this volume, as does the fun. I have a feeling that the author's own interest in the Bank of England and its monetary affairs greatly exceeds my own.

Fortunately there is just one more book in this series that is beginning to get long winded.
Profile Image for Marie.
874 reviews8 followers
December 11, 2023
3.5 stars. "Currency" suffers a bit from middle book syndrome. It's not the middle of the series, but it's the middle of the third part of the series. It furthers the story but meanders and plods some. It's as clever and funny as the rest of the series, it just has a less clean start and end. Currency also gathers up all the lose ends to present to the final installment, which makes it feel a little scattered.
381 reviews
March 7, 2025
The details on life and the people of that time chose the author spent a lot of time researching more accuracy in the descriptions in this book, very well described. However, the plot seems forced. This book does tie off many loose ends from the earlier volumes. So if you want to know what happened to many of the people in the earlier ones, you do need to read this one. It also does leave you hanging for the ending.
Profile Image for Lars Dradrach.
1,094 reviews
December 20, 2017
What can I say that I haven’t already said in the previous volumes, the whole series stands out as something special among everything else I have read.

A lot of the side stories are easier to follow this second time I listen to it, but it’s still story where you have to concentrate and keep your wigs and Tory’s straight.

Now on to the final volume
Profile Image for Woody Hayday.
Author 1 book8 followers
February 5, 2025
7 books in to the 8 book Baroque Cycle I continue to be enthralled. Currency reads superbly, with such consistently sound prose as to make me literally burst out laughing when subtle wit is smuggled into the writing.

Just an outright great book.

Woody Hayday
Profile Image for Steve Swayne.
148 reviews1 follower
December 25, 2019
Continuation of the Baroque Cycle novels. I enjoy the way we are subtly given a history lesson in the development of currency, the Bank of England, the monetary system and how people gradually came to trust money.
Profile Image for Jimmy Tarlau.
218 reviews5 followers
May 16, 2021
I like to finish things I start but I must say this trip is getting a little boring. In the last two volumes not much happens and the book is only so-so. I look forward to wrapping this up and hope the last volume is more exciting.
Profile Image for Eduardo Taylor.
101 reviews3 followers
January 12, 2020
This far in I'm only concerned it will eventually end. What an immense story, viewed as a whole, nearly a century covered with the coming and goings of an era I knew so little about. Loved it.
Profile Image for Sharondblk.
1,064 reviews17 followers
July 26, 2021
It's book seven, so no major surprises, except that everyone is back together and in fine form.
And the plot basically makes sense again, which is nice.
Profile Image for Alex.
878 reviews18 followers
May 15, 2025
This volume was more interesting than its predecessor. However, I didn't particularly care about the novel's primary conflict.
Profile Image for Tim Jin.
843 reviews4 followers
March 5, 2014
After finishing "Solomon’s Gold", I was excited to get through the "Currency." I was suspecting that the story would pick up in the second book in the last volume. For anyone that has been invested in the Baroque Cycle thus far, there is an instinct trait of Neal Stephenson's writing. Depending on the tempo of the setting, his style can be slow and fast. Unlike other authors, Stephenson let the reader decide on what pace to read these books.

For example, the Baroque Cycle could be considered as a soap opera with Eliza, or a history lesson of the 18th century with Newton and the Towers of London, or an action pack adventure with Jack the Coiner. However you interpret the Baroque's society, you are never disappointed on the outcome. His writing style is not like a bull, charging the gate. His style is more of a turtle morphing into a rabbit.

As for "Currency", I thought that the series reached its climax by going into more in depth in the gold plates and the Bank of England. I've been looking forward to this ever since the definition of Quicksilver. Although I really enjoyed the constant cat and mouse game between Newton and Jack, I was ecstatic to learn more about the financial system and the building of the towers.

There are so many elements in this series, but if you decide to focus on one of it and see it through the end, all of the notes will come together in the Baroque Cycle.
Profile Image for Julie  Capell.
1,218 reviews33 followers
December 31, 2014
I loved, loved, loved this installment in the Baroque cycle. Action, intrigue, science, royal succession, Jesuits, slavery, the creation of money, alchemy . . . this book has it all. It is nearly impossible to categorize this series of novels except to say that they are unlike any other books I have ever read. I can’t wait to listen to the final installment. The writing is phenomenal. One of the things I absolutely love is the way Stephenson describes people. Here are three quotes from "Currency" displaying this talent.

These women stared out from the canvases with arched brows, enormous eyes and tiny mouths, seeing much, and saying little.

He is flitting and hopping about in the lobby like a sparrow whose nest had just been blown down in a windstorm.

[The thief-taker] was conspicuous by his age, I should estimate he is in his middle fifties, and by a bearing, I am tempted to call it dignity, wanting in the others. He has a good head of hair, only a bit thin on top, blond going grey, and sea green eyes. He has an excellently carved set of teeth, but displays them rarely. He has a trim figure, unusual in a profession that consists largely of loitering around taverns, but any illusion that he is especially fit is dispelled when he begins to move, for he is a little bit halt, and a little bit lame, stiff in the joints and given to frequent sighs and grimaces that hint at pains internal.
Profile Image for Микола.
Author 5 books31 followers
January 10, 2013
Прочитати «Бароковий цикл» Ніла Стівенсона залпом не виходить (думаю, не тільки у мене), але читати його по роману-два на рік — справжнє задоволення.
Автор вибудовує свою реальність настільки детально (тут з цілком рококошним іноді надміром), що не тільки персонажі, а й читач оселяється у цьому просторі. Можна сказати, що кінець циклу не настільки різноплановий жанрово, як початок. Але ж і персонажів зустрічаєш, як давніх знайомих. Так і є: дехто з них прожив на сторінках романів ціле життя на наших очах.

Окрім книжки, від якої просто неможливо відірватися, окремо хочеться вклонитися авторові за моменти, коли стискаєш кулаки і думаєш «та нехай же в них нарешті все буде добре» про персонажів, які вигадані — і Стівенсоном, і майстерно розіграним сюжетом.

Profile Image for Turkish.
205 reviews19 followers
June 14, 2014
Устаешь восторгаться таланту Нила Стивенсона, который из книги в книгу не знает угасания. В этой части особенно хорошо продемонстрирована, так сказать, макро синхронизация сюжетных линий ( он мастер этого дела) : если в "Смешении" он широкими взмахами связывал героев ниточками длинной в месяца, а то и годы, то в "Движении" Стивенсон тончайшими мазками поминутно изображает жизнь каждого из важнейших лиц романа, отмечает влияние каждого мазка на все другие, связывая каждое действие в увлекательный узел сюжетных перипетий, создавая воистину Лейбницовскую вселенную, где каждая монада обладает восприятием и собственной душой.
Profile Image for Michael Nash.
441 reviews12 followers
December 6, 2015
*1st Reading*
Manages to pull together most of the threads of the *very* complicated story of the baroque cycle into a magnificent conclusion. I thought that du Gex had been flanderized from his first appearance into a Snidely Whiplash figure, but it was totally worth it for the epic scene . I feel like The System of the World can't but be a long denouement. But I feel like the series was worth it for this book alone.

*2nd Reading*
My opinion hasn't changed. This was a great read, and ties most of the series together in a compelling way.
Profile Image for Ed.
316 reviews2 followers
May 20, 2014
Notwithstanding its title, Currency is as much to do with the politics of succession as does with money. As entertaining as it is informative.

One cannot but be impressed with Stephenson's polymathic abilities.

Unfortunately, only one more title left in this series.
577 reviews
October 29, 2014
The seventh book in the series. This was was a fun adventure focusing at how the use of currency really started (beyond just the cash part) and tying in an active adventure with all our heros. Jack still plays an active part as does Eliza, Daniel, and Newton. Interesting read.

Profile Image for D Calco.
50 reviews5 followers
July 12, 2010
The System of the World (The Baroque Cycle, Vol. 3) by Neal Stephenson (2004)
Profile Image for Blue.
90 reviews
December 31, 2010
Good grief...the longer this series goes on, the more difficult it gets...
I still like Jack Shaftoe...
15 reviews
March 10, 2011
Nothing compares to the Baroque Cycle, except maybe "Lost," and that is cheating because it has a huge budget and moving pictures. I prefer Neal's Jack at any rate.
Profile Image for Jeff.
431 reviews4 followers
March 5, 2012
Interesting progress in the story following the Isaac Newton and coining in the Tower of London. In the background, the workings of Jack Shaftoe are ever-present.
Profile Image for Joost Pisters.
15 reviews1 follower
June 10, 2012
Another gripping volume of the Baroque Cycle. Stephenson is so masterly changing between slow and fast pace action.
340 reviews6 followers
March 6, 2013
Daniel Waterhouse and Isaac Newton play a game of cat and mouse with Jack Shaftoe against a backdrop of political upheaval in England.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 39 reviews

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