

A work of great erudition and equally great imaginative power, it is-and will remain-one of the significant literary accomplishments of the modern era. On another, it is a provocative meditation on the ways that science and technology help shape-and alter-the course of human history. On one level, it is an astonishing, wholly original portrait of a world at war. Sometimes horrific, frequently hilarious, densely packed with information on a wide variety of subjects, from cryptanalysis to treasure hunting to the proper method of eating Cap’n Crunch, Cryptonomicon is a genuine modern epic. The book is decent but I don't think the genre interests me very much. Together, these two narratives successfully illuminate two different worlds, one of which grew directly out of the struggles and achievements of the other. I'm 260 pages in the book 'Cryptonomicon' by Neal Stephenson. Protagonists of the latter section include Randy Waterhouse, Lawrence’s grandson, a computer hacker helping to construct an autonomous “data haven” in the Sultanate of Kirakuta. The earlier segments feature, among others, Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse, a young math prodigy tasked with concealing the fact that Allied forces have successfully broken Germany’s infamous Enigma code. The events of Cryptonomicon take place along two parallel time tracks: the Second World War and the present day.

An ambitious, absorbing account of war, conspiracy, and code breaking, it represented a huge step forward for a gifted writer whose previous creations included the Hugo Award-winning The Diamond Age and the virtual reality classic, Snow Crash. Cryptonomicon, by Neal Stephenson, New York: Avon, 928 pages, 27. Neal Stephenson’s Cryptonomicon was first published in 1999 to immense critical and popular acclaim. Dust jacket and interior illustrations by Patrick Arrasmith
