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Snow Crash
BotM Discussion - SCI-FI
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Snow Crash, BOTM, spoilers
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Wayland, Ernest Scribbler
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rated it 2 stars
Apr 02, 2017 10:10AM

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Tried to read it twice and it just doesnt work for me. It all feels a bit dense and a bit dated.


That sounds worrying - I generally don't care for books with worldviews that are very cynical, but I'll still give it a try.


Hmm, I suspect I'll understand better what you mean after I read it. :)

It's a slow, complicated plot that takes a while to get going. What I remembered liking the most was how Stephenson wove in Sumerian myths to create a nuerolinguistic virus. Very different from what I had read previously. I do think that the story peaks in the middle and that the grand finale was lacking.
Hiro Protagonist as a main character name? The play on words made my eyes roll.


Boy I just came here to write the same thing. What a sad state of affairs. Reminds me of a creative writing class that we had to pick a subject every day and write about it for 6 weeks. There were some very strange subjects by the end of that 6 weeks. Well this is one strange subject.


Part of its charm when it was released was that it was parodying a lot of the cyberpunk books of its time, which were often just as ridiculous while trying to be serious.
Finished. The bits about Sumerian myth were vaguely interesting. The idea of a hacker as ancient god and humans being programmable and vulnerable to computer viruses was weird. I really could have done without reading about a 15 year old girl having sex and her booby trapped.... umm.... crotch? Trying to not get too graphic here. All in all, really didn't enjoy this much. Finished it because I'm stubborn and, at the moment, there are no books I've started that I haven't finished, although one did take three tries.
Veronica wrote: "I'm at 67% now...having made it through some lengthy exposition on toilet paper in the workplace."
Yeah, if that was supposed to be satire, it really shoulda been a LOT shorter. Then again, one could argue that for the book.
Yeah, if that was supposed to be satire, it really shoulda been a LOT shorter. Then again, one could argue that for the book.


I was really into the satire here too... maybe b/c my job is at a pretty bureaucratic workplace I enjoyed the commentary on how govt coding works and how gated communities were a pseudo country-corporate set-up.

I'm about 40% and losing the will to live. Is it one of those books that gets better or should it have hit its peak by now and Snow Crash and I will never be friends?
I hate to abandon a book before half way but it's a struggle. Can anyone give me hope?
I hate to abandon a book before half way but it's a struggle. Can anyone give me hope?

Lel, I have doubts that you'll find any redemption in the last 60% if you're feeling that way now. I don't like to discourage people from finishing books, especially by authors I like, but this one in particular kind of wanders. I'm not sure if it has a peak, as far as I can recall.
I read this last year for my in-person book club. I gave it 3 stars but cannot remember why. I only remember I was relieved to read the last page. Maybe some of the cyberpunk parody felt nostalgic? (per Mike's comment above.) :) And I hadn't looked at it as a parody at the time but makes sense. I don't generally enjoy parody.
I got to 50% and decided that life is just too short for me to carry on reading this one.
I didnt like the writing style, the characters didn't do anything for me and it just kept going off on a tangent that seemed to just want to show off how clever the author is rather than add to the story.
I actually quite liked the start with the crazy pizza delivery but after that it all just went downhill for me. I hate not finishing books but in the words of Scotty 'I just cant do it captain'.
I didnt like the writing style, the characters didn't do anything for me and it just kept going off on a tangent that seemed to just want to show off how clever the author is rather than add to the story.
I actually quite liked the start with the crazy pizza delivery but after that it all just went downhill for me. I hate not finishing books but in the words of Scotty 'I just cant do it captain'.

And I want my Audible credit back.

Great metaphor.


I know Cinder is one a few of the Mods look back on with hatred but this has been a humdinger. I didn't like this book but I can see how it may have gone down better closer to its publication than now.
Ryan wrote: "Has any book been as universally loathed by D&J as this one?"
Been a few negatives, but I don't recall it being quite this pervasive before.
Been a few negatives, but I don't recall it being quite this pervasive before.


If you've loved other books by him, you might enjoy it. But then again I loved Seveneves....
There were times that Seveneves REALLY dragged on though, but for some reason, it was more tolerable for that book than it was in Snow Crash. Like I said though, I am sure it is because the genre (cyberpunk) isn't very interesting to me personally. I am still willing to give his other books a try.

yeah, I think you are right Paul. I have to say though, I enjoyed Cinder a hell of a lot more than I enjoyed this one!
I'm feeling pretty good now about my decision to not bother with it (so many other things to read). Did those who voted for it already read it, or were they just hoping it was good?
Jessica wrote: yeah, I think you are right Paul. I have to say though, I enjoyed Cinder a hell of a lot more than I enjoyed this one!
Agreed. Cinder had its moments. This one... not so much, IMHO.
Agreed. Cinder had its moments. This one... not so much, IMHO.

The summary sounded meh to me and from the sounds of it I would have felt that way about the book itself.

Maybe after 25 years, this books is simply outdated and sci-fi readers as a whole have out grown it.

Rather obviously, if you don't like the book, stop. And if you don't like the book it does NOT mean you're wrong at all. But I'd encourage people to at least try the book (any book).
I have no issue with the book being dated. I simply didn't care for it. I thought it wasn't well written, and, as I've said before, when you make a plot point of a 15 year old girl having sex, which is illegal in many places, you're going to lose some readers.
I agree, try new things. But I'd say the majority opinion on this one wasn't remotely positive.
I agree, try new things. But I'd say the majority opinion on this one wasn't remotely positive.


That one is difficult. Keeping readers might not always be the ultimate target of an author. Also, he might not even care, because that age is perfectly legal in many countries with large populations. Additionally, this is a SF elaborating on a future where you can expect that legislation is different and the author might want to demonstrate exactly that things will be more liberal. After all, you weren't offended by the fact that late pizza drivers might be eliminated, although current legislation would clearly not allow that one.
SF readers are quite liberal concerning sexuality - I haven't heard of problems with gay people in novels, although it is illegal inmore than 70 countries in the world.

When books seem to be outdated, it usually is not because of the technological content of the book, but rather the general tone or attitude. Most books have a cultural or social subtext, which may lose its impact when read in a different time period. For example, a lot of the SF books from the 1960's might have a counter-culture aspect which doesn't translate well into today's world.
With regard to Snow Crash, it very much seems like an adolescent boy's fantasy. Given the time and context when it was written (again, I think part of it was meant to be a satire of the MTV-cyberpunk era), it worked very well. However, now it seems a little immature.

Snow Crash is less an adolescent fantasy that 1) a hacker fantasy (remember this came out in a world that was basically pre-internet) and 2) it's his first published book and, IIRC, the second he ever wrote.
@wayland - "...when you make a plot point of a 15 year old girl having sex, which is illegal in many places, you're going to lose some readers. ..." This is kind of what I mean. You're applying real world, 21st century mores to a futuristic world where many things have broken down and that scene specifically takes place on an anarchic, lawless flotilla. Again, SFF asks us to accept aliens, magic, etc etc... but when we see something outside our contemporary experience, we reject it. Also, how do you react to depictions of rape, murder, etc in most fantasy? If this disturbs you, I can't see you being OK with virtually ANY grimdark stuff yet you've read and rated highly some Abercrombie. Uh...?
For the record, (as if I should have to note this...) I'm not condoning adults having sex with underage minors in the real world at all. That said, I think it's precious that people still believe it's rare that minors have sex. They usually just have it with each other.
I have no issue with minors having sex with each other if they are mature enough to handle it. That's a very tricky thing to handle. For example, I think it's horrific that if two teens have sex, the girl might get a bad rep out of it while the guy gets charged with statutory rape. Yes, that's assuming a hetero-norm couple.
I DO have an issue with adults having sex with minors. I've worked way too many sexual assault cases. You're generalizing a lot about my tastes from one review.
And, again, I don't think it's the subject matter in this book. The overwhelming reaction thus far appears to be it's poorly written, or, at best, hasn't aged well. That doesn't mean the people who like it are wrong; individual tastes are just that- individual. I do think it might suggest something when so many don't like the book.
I DO have an issue with adults having sex with minors. I've worked way too many sexual assault cases. You're generalizing a lot about my tastes from one review.
And, again, I don't think it's the subject matter in this book. The overwhelming reaction thus far appears to be it's poorly written, or, at best, hasn't aged well. That doesn't mean the people who like it are wrong; individual tastes are just that- individual. I do think it might suggest something when so many don't like the book.

My own opinion does count not yet. I'm 10% in only, but so far I'm really enjoying it. The typical Stephenson qualities like his narrative voice, or his creativity shine shine through already.
TIL that the term Avatar has been coined in this novel. The multiverse is a kind of Second Life experience way before any MMORPG had been created, together with the typical sociological phenomenons like cheap mass Avatars vs. exclusive ones. So, at least a couple of technological innovations transport very well to our current times. Others, like video recorders or those monitors, not so much.

I'm going to make an analogy here and then stop commenting.
When DC Comics came out with Man Of Steel in 2013, it had very different reactions. Some thought it was an interesting new take on the character and loved it. Some thought it was a bad version of a beloved character and hated it. Since I'm active in reviewing hero themed stuff and a mod on a board about that elsewhere, what was eventually agreed on was that, love it or hate it, Man of Steel was probably the most divisive comic book movie made.
Sounds to me like Snow Crash is heading that way for within this group.
Just a thought.
When DC Comics came out with Man Of Steel in 2013, it had very different reactions. Some thought it was an interesting new take on the character and loved it. Some thought it was a bad version of a beloved character and hated it. Since I'm active in reviewing hero themed stuff and a mod on a board about that elsewhere, what was eventually agreed on was that, love it or hate it, Man of Steel was probably the most divisive comic book movie made.
Sounds to me like Snow Crash is heading that way for within this group.
Just a thought.

I read Neuromancer in the mid-to-late 1980s, not long after it was first published. It would be very hard for someone to read it today and feel the same impact as back then. The book popularized (or invented, depending on who you talk to) the term "cyberspace" and was probably the biggest uncredited influence on The Matrix and its sequels. The idea of someone plugging into a virtual world, and having that virtual world affect the world around you, was pretty unique at the time. The book kicked off the whole "cyberpunk" phase that was prevalent in SF for the next 10-15 years. The plot was really incidental, which has seemingly become a hallmark of Gibson's as he has advanced into the tricky subjects of pants and boutique hotels in his later less compelling works.
Snow Crash, on the other hand, I also read a few years after it was published, probably closer to the "Y2K" hysteria of the late 1990s. In the heart of the dot-com boom, prior to the 9/11 aftermath that overtook the country for the early part of the new millennium, Snow Crash was a breath of fresh air among all the too serious, never profitable internet startups that would become nothing more than a disturbing memory ("HomeGrocer" anyone? How about "DrKoop"?). The suggestion that the virtual world would someday make the real world irrelevant was nicely lampooned by Stephenson. The book made me laugh out loud a few times - just thinking about America striving to be the best in the world at delivering pizzas under 30 minutes still makes me chuckle. The middle part was slow, but it was the ancient Sumerian info dump that made me realize how smart Stephenson was and what an interesting concept he had tackled, underneath some of the plot silliness. I regret I've never read another of his fictions, although I hope to get to one later this year (haven't completely decided which one yet).
I hate to hear that not everyone enjoyed Snow Crash, or Neuromancer for that matter. Maybe the books were a product of their times and will never again be as relevant as they were back then. That's probably true of a lot of SF - it's the rare ones that can hold up forever. Anyway, I re-read Neuromancer and the rest of Gibson's Sprawl and Bridge series a couple years ago - maybe it's time for me to re-read Snow Crash too, just to see if it still has the same effect that it did when I first read it.

When Neuromancer was published 1984, my book friends already rumoured about that new SF revolution, I guess they were pretty en vogue (no wonder, they were translators and publishers here in Germany).
Gibson wasn't late in the game, but he wasn't the first. The term was first brought up by Bruce Bethke who wrote the eponymous short story (you can read it here) in 1980 and sold it in 1982. It had ancestors with Brunner's The Shockwave Rider which sits in somewhere between New Wave and Cyberpunk. Aesthetics was defined by the movie Blade Runner from 1982 (which was based loosely on P.K. Dick's Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?). The Encyclopaedia Britannica gives Gardner Dozois the honour to have popularized the term.
So, Gibson played a very important role, but don't forget Bruce Sterling, Rudy Rucker's 1982 Software, Pad Cadigan, just to name a few.
Having said that, Snow Crash is quite late in the genre, but I never read that seminal work before. Those others deserve a re-read.
Books mentioned in this topic
Jennifer Government (other topics)Neuromancer (other topics)
Cinder (other topics)
The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer (other topics)
Reamde (other topics)
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