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         Stephenson Neal:     more books (99)
  1. Principia by Neal Stephenson, 2008
  2. Quicksilver (Baroque Cycle 1) by Neal Stephenson, 2003-01
  3. Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson, 2006-05-31
  4. King of the Vagabonds: The Baroque Cycle #2 by Neal Stephenson, 2006-03-01
  5. The Confusion (The Baroque Cycle, Vol. 2) by Neal Stephenson, 2005-06-01
  6. Zodiac by Neal Stephenson, Jean-Pierre Pugi, 2002-09-04
  7. Anatema (Spanish Edition) by Neal Stephenson, 2009-12-01
  8. Diamond Age. Die Grenzwelt. by Neal Stephenson, 2001-12-01
  9. INTERZONE 109 by Pringle Dave (Editor) Neal Stephenson, 1996
  10. Tomorrow through the Past: Neal Stephenson and the Project of Global Modernization by Jon Lewis, 2008-01-10
  11. SPSS Manual: for Introduction to the Practice of Statistics 4e by Paul Stephenson, Neal Rogness, et all 2002-08-20
  12. Cryptonomicon 1ST Edition by Neal Stephenson, 1999-01-01
  13. Odalisque (Baroque Cycle) by Neal Stephenson, 2011-02-07
  14. Odalisque (Baroque Cycle) by Neal Stephenson, 2011-02-07

21. Cryptonomicon Stephenson Neal Torrent Downloads Bittorrent Download Source!
Cryptonomicon Stephenson Neal torrent downloads, Cryptonomicon Stephenson Neal Bittorrent download source for torrent downloading, movies, music, games, software, tv shows
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22. Allscifi.com Neal Stephenson Fan Club
A detailed analysis of the plot, setting, characters, theme, and structure of Cryptonomicon and Snow Crash, and links to similar works by other novelists.
http://www.allscifi.com/Topic.asp?TopicID=103

23. Neal Stephenson | LibraryThing
Also known as NEAL STEPHSON, N. Stephenson, Stevenson Neal, Stephanson Neal, Neal Stephenson, Neil Stephenson (see complete list), Neil Stephenson, Neal R. Stephenson, Neal
http://www.librarything.com/author/stephensonneal

24. Stephenson__Neal___Cryptonomicon__html__anonib.rar
There is a new version of Internet Explorer available. For the best browsing experience please upgrade your browser. Upgrade Now
http://www.mediafire.com/?dzkjxn2dndt

25. The Diamond Age - Neal Stephenson
General information, review of, and links to other reviews of The Diamond Age.
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/stephenn/diamond.htm
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The Diamond Age
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Neal Stephenson
general information
review summaries our review links ... about the author
Title: The Diamond Age Author: Neal Stephenson Genre: Novel Written: Length: 499 pages Availability: The Diamond Age - US The Diamond Age - UK The Diamond Age - Canada - France Diamond Age. Die Grenzwelt. - Deutschland
  • Winner of the 1996 Hugo Award
- Return to top of the page - Our Assessment: B- : ambitious story with interesting ideas, but never really takes off. See our review for fuller assessment. Review Summaries Source Rating Date Reviewer New Scientist John Gribbin Newsweek The NY Times Book Rev. B+ Gerald Jonas San Francisco Chronicle B+ Michael Berry San Francisco Chronicle A- Jon Carroll USA Today A- Steve Jones The Village Voice A Richard Gehr Review Consensus No strong negatives. Everyone liked the combination of old values and new technology, most approve of his literary style though some think he carries it to excess on occasion. From the Reviews
  • "While the final chapters of the novel veer toward the stylistic excesses that marred

26. SFFRD: Search Results :: Texas A&M University Libraries
Discovering the Machine in You The Literary, Social and Religious Implications of Neal Stephenson's Snow Crash. Grassian, Daniel Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts 12
http://sffrd.library.tamu.edu/search/subject/4526/
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Results for subject : "STEPHENSON, NEAL"
Search for: Fulltext Authors Subjects Advanced Found items on pages. Title: Author: Subject: Imprint: Flag this page Flagged items: View Clear Download Email ...
15th Science Fiction Chronicle Reader Awards
No author listed Science Fiction Chronicle 18(2): 11. April/May 1997. Subjects: AWARDS RESNICK, MIKE STEPHENSON, NEAL SHWARTZ, SUSAN ... KELLY, JAMES
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1996 Hugo and Campbell Awards
No author listed Science Fiction Chronicle 18(1): 5. October 1996. Subjects: HUGO AWARDS, 1996 STEPHENSON, NEAL STEELE, ALLEN KELLY, JAMES PATRICK ... JOHN W. CAMPBELL AWARD FOR BEST NEW SF WRITER, 1996
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1996 Hugo Awards Winners
No author listed Locus 37(4): 7, 34-38, 74. October 1996. Subjects: HUGO AWARDS, 1996 STEPHENSON, NEAL FEINTUCH, DAVID JOHN W. CAMPBELL AWARD FOR BEST NEW WRITER, 1996
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1996 Locus Awards Winners
No author listed Locus 37(2): 7, 36-39, 70-71. August 1996.

27. Zodiac - Neal Stephenson
General information, a review, and links to other reviews of Zodiac.
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/stephenn/zodiac.htm
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Title: Zodiac Author: Neal Stephenson Genre: Novel Written: Length: 308 pages Availability: Zodiac - US Zodiac - UK Zodiac - Canada Zodiac - France
  • An Eco-Thriller
- Return to top of the page - Our Assessment: B : an entertaining ride, though it ultimately goes a bit overboard See our review for fuller assessment. The complete review 's Review Written in a fresh, funny style, Zodiac is an often enjoyable little ecological thriller. Narrator Sangamon Taylor, who works for a Greenpeace-like organization, GEE, in Boston, goes about saving the world, mainly by exposing (and stopping, by any means possible) the illegal dumping of chemicals by industry. It is an amusing premise, and Stephenson is right in finding the slightly wacky, very creative environmental action groups an ideal setting for a novel. Taylor lives a laid back, generally carefree life, without much respect for authority. Dealing with big corporations, who show absolutely no respect for the environment or EPA laws, he takes what they do very seriously, without taking them seriously. Sniffing nitrous oxide from huge Hefty bags, living and working with a cast of true characters (though not so far-out as to be truly annoying), Taylor is also very serious about his job, and very good at it.

28. Quicksilver - Neal Stephenson
Review of Neal Stephenson s Quicksilver.
http://www.complete-review.com/reviews/stephenn/qsilver.htm
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Quicksilver
by Neal Stephenson general information review summaries our review links ... about the author Title: Quicksilver Author: Neal Stephenson Genre: Novel Written: Length: 916 pages Availability: Quicksilver - US Quicksilver - UK Quicksilver - Canada Quicksilver - Deutschland
  • Volume 1 of The Baroque Cycle
  • Includes an eleven page Dramatis Personae
  • Awarded the 2004 Arthur C. Clarke Award
- Return to top of the page - Our Assessment: B+ : digressive, over-full, following several very different stories See our review for fuller assessment. Review Summaries Source Rating Date Reviewer The Age Lucy Sussex Daily Telegraph Mark Sanderson Entertainment Weekly A- Ken Tucker FAZ Dietmar Dath The Guardian Steven Poole The Independent A Charles Shaar Murray Independent on Sunday Nick Hasted The New Republic D Deborah Friedell The NY Times Book Rev. Polly Shulman Salon Andrew Leonard Sunday Telegraph Patrick Ness Sydney Morning Herald Lachlan Jobbins TLS Henry Hitchings USA Today Elizabeth Wiese The Village Voice John Giuffo The Washington Post B- Elizabeth Hand Weekly Standard S.T. Karnick

29. Stephenson, Neal - NetLingo The Internet Dictionary: Online Dictionary Of Comput
NetLingo has thousands of definitions that explain the online world of business, technology, and communication, plus the largest list of text and chat acronyms ;)
http://www.netlingo.com/word/stephenson-neal.php

30. Neal Stephenson S Home Page
Basic biographical information maintained by the author.
http://web.mac.com/nealstephenson

31. One Hour To Read: Stephenson, Neal Archives
Or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer I don't know if I've picked up more on nanotechnology or if I just took my time when I read but this Neal Stephenson book made more sense
http://www.onehourtoread.com/stephenson-neal/
One Hour to Read The Reading Experience, Blogged
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Diamond Age
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by Jody on March 15, 2009 7:40 PM Permalink Comments (0) TrackBacks (0) Or, A Young Lady's Illustrated Primer
I don't know if I've picked up more on nanotechnology or if I just took my time when I read but this Neal Stephenson book made more sense when I read it this time around as well. At this rate, I'll be ready to have another run at the Quicksilver series
The best part of Stephenson's writing for me is the ensemble cast. There are always a dozen people to follow around and everyone has at least three agendas on the go. I also love to watch the way that all of the storylines converge. This is another book with a tangible sense of pace that picks up as everyone draws closer to the endgame, always a good thing in my books.
I've been having a bit of a binge on my reading right now so I'm a little tapped out for commentary. I'm also a little hungry for breakfast and, as I don't have a Matter Compiler in my kitchen to fill my order, I need to go and actually do something about breakfast.
Snow Crash
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32. Smiley's People
Anti-smiley article written by Stephenson.
http://www.spesh.com/lee/ns/smiley.html
Smiley's people
Neal Stephenson
Source: The New Republic September 13, 1993 With the eerie uniformity of airport cultists, emoticon users all proffer the same rationale for the smiley tic: since the streams of ascii characters flowing across the Internet (usually described as "cold," "mechanistic," etc.) cannot carry body language or tone, the missing cues must be supplied through punctuation. The tendency of writers to bungle their attempts at sarcasm, and of readers to bungle the detection of it, invariably leads (so the argument goes) to hurt feelings, which in turn leads to network "flame wars" in which people insult each other in extravagant terms that would never be used face- to-face. Irony, it seems, is like nitroglycerin: too tricky to be good for much, and so best left in the hands of fanatics or trained professionals. Never addressed by such people is the question of how humans have managed to communicate with the written word for thousands of years without strewing crudely fashioned ideograms across their parchments. It is as if the written word were a cutting-edge technology without useful precedents. Some hackers actually go so far as to maintain, with a straight face (:-I), that words on a computer screen are different from words on paperimplying that writers of e-mail have nothing useful to learn from Dickens or Hemingway, and that time spent reading old books might be better spent coming up with new emoticons. Other smiley partisans maintain that, since many messages are tossed off extemporaneously, the medium has more in common with talking than writing, hence the need for emoticons. This neatly sidesteps the awkward fact that what these people are engaged in is, in fact, nothing other than plain old writing and reading, and that, as always, they may have to invest some time and effort in the act if they don't want to mess it up.

33. The Diamond Age - STEPHENSON, Neal | Between The Covers Rare Books
First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Signed by the author. Although not marked in any way, this copy from the distinguished modern first edition collection of Bruce Kahn.
http://www.betweenthecovers.com/btc/item/303589/
Home About Us Site Map Help ... Shopping Cart Images+Detail Item Info STEPHENSON, Neal The Diamond Age New York: Bantam Books (1995). First edition. Fine in fine dustwrapper. Signed by the author. Although not marked in any way, this copy is from the distinguished modern first edition collection of Bruce Kahn. [BTC #303589] More Results Explore BTC highlights along with additional titles in stock related to the item above... STEPHENSON, Neal The Confusion: Volume Two of... STEPHENSON, Neal The Diamond Age ... The Broken Bubble Book Bargains Our staff cat, Admiral Muffin, has selected thousands of books for special discount from all areas of our stock. Westerns Poetry Plays Science Fiction ... A Monkey in Silk ORIG. $100.00 SALE $70.00 On Collecting... Views, anecdotes and insights into the world of antiquarian books by the BTC staff and distinguished guests. Just Added Book Catalogs Galore The Bookshop in Old New Castle Bookselling in Hard Times: "Will work for rare books" The Between the Covers Blog ... Organized Labor Goes Feline Introductory Articles What the hell kind of website is this anyway?

34. Wired 2.02: In The Kingdom Of Mao Bell
A billion Chinese are using new technology to create the fastest growing economy on the planet. But while the information wants to be free, do they? Article written by Stephenson.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.02/mao.bell.html
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    In the Kingdom of Mao Bell
    A billion Chinese are using new technology to create the fastest growing economy on the planet. But while the information wants to be free, do they?

    By Neal Stephenson In the inevitable rotating lounge atop the Shangri-La Hotel in the Shenzhen Special Economic Zone, a burly local businessman, wearing a synthetic polo shirt stretched so thin as to be semitransparent, takes in the view, some drinks, and selections from the dinner buffet. He is accompanied by a lissome consort in a nice flowered print dress. Like any face-conscious Chinese businessman he carries a large boxy cellular phone. It's not that he can't afford a "prawn," as the newer flip phones are called. His model is prized because it stands up on a restaurant table, antenna in the fully erect position, flaunting the owner's connectivity - and in China, connections are everything. The lounge spins disconcertingly fast - you have to recalibrate your inner ear when you enter, and I half expect to see the head of my Guinness listing. Furthermore, it is prone to a subtly disturbing oscillation known to audio engineers as wow. Outside the smoked windows, Typhoon Abe is gathering his forces. Shenzhen spins around me, wowing sporadically.

35. Stephenson Neal | Facebook
Welcome to the Facebook Community Page about Stephenson Neal, a collection of shared knowledge concerning Stephenson Neal.
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Stephenson-Neal/101913319847130
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36. WIRED SCENARIOS: - Global Neighborhood Watch Neal Stephenson
Proposal regarding neighborhood safety, written by Neal Stephenson.
http://www.wired.com/wired/scenarios/global.html

I live in a pleasant, middle-class, mixed-race neighborhood in a big West Coast city. The only real problem here is property crime. It's not a dangerous neighborhood by any stretch of the imagination - June Cleaver could walk down the middle of the street naked at 3 a.m. and feel perfectly safe. Even so, we do have our Eddie Haskells: A car gets broken into or stolen every couple of weeks. Burglaries occur a few times a year. You'd think that we would do something about it. But we busy middle-class people, contrary to stereotype, are nothing if not adaptable. The first time something happens it's an aberration. The second time and thereafter, we absorb it into our routine. So when one of us goes outside in the morning and finds a glittering spray of safety glass where our car used to be, we make calls to the cops and the insurance company, then wait for a check in the mail. We rarely see the police. We never see the criminals. Until a few weeks ago. A youth gang strolled into our neighborhood in broad daylight on a weekend afternoon, smashed out a window on my neighbor's car, and tried to steal it. When my neighbor pulled up in a second car and took issue with this plan, the gang objected to his objections, battered his second car, and threatened to come back later and kill him. They were genuinely outraged that one of their victims would actually have such temerity. Crime had become just as easy and routine for them as it had for us. The next weekend, as an experiment, I spent the wee hours of the morning looking out through my front window. I half expected to see the street fill up with pimps, prostitutes, and drug dealers at the stroke of midnight. My activity log for the night looked like this:

37. Edward Champion's Reluctant Habits | Stephenson, Neal
a cultural website in evershifting standing Neal Stephenson appeared on The Bat Segundo Show 245. Stephenson is most recently the author of Anathem.
http://www.edrants.com/category/stephenson-neal/
a cultural website in ever-shifting standing
Stephenson, Neal Archive

38. Wired 1.20 Spew
Are you on the trail of the next unexploited market niche - or just on a nookie hunt? Article written by Neal Stephenson.
http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.10/spew.html
[an error occurred while processing this directive]
  • Wired Home Subscribe Sections All Wired Top Stories Magazine Wired Blogs Video
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    Spew
    Are you on the trail of the next unexploited market niche - or just on a nookie hunt?

    By Neal Stephenson SEE ALSO Archive Category: Web Development
    Connectivity

    Yeah, I know it's boring of me to send you plain old Text like this, and I hope you don't just blow this message off without reading it. But what can I say, I was an English major. On video, I come off like a stunned bystander. I'm just a Text kind of guy. I'm gambling that you'll think it's quaint or something. So let me just tell you the whole sorry tale, starting from the point where I think I went wrong. I'd be blowing brown smoke if I said I wasn't nervous when they shoved in the needles, taped on the trodes, thrust my head into the Big Cold Magnet, and opened a channel direct from the Spew to my immortal soul. Of course they didn't call it the Spew, and neither did I - I wanted the job, after all. But how could I not call it that, with its Feeds multifarious as the glistening strands cascading sunnily from the supple scalps of the models in the dandruff shampoo ads. I mention that image because it was the first thing I saw when they turned the Spew on, and I wasn't even ready. Not that anyone could ever

39. DREAMS & NIGHTMARES OF THE DIGITAL AGE
Speculation on the consequences of a networked society.
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/1997/int/970203/special.dreams_.html
FEBRUARY 3, 1997 VOL. 149 NO.5
SPECIAL REPORT/THE NETWORKED SOCIETY BY NEAL STEPHENSON
In The Diamond Age, science-fiction novelist Neal Stephenson imagined a world in which hyperadvanced microtechnology is wedded to the social structure and mores of the Victorian Era. Currently at work on a new novel about electronic secrets, Stephenson took time off to prepare for TIME this admittedly speculative rumination on worst-case scenarios for the networked society. Worrying about technology has become one of the pillars of the Establishment. Our government has created special panels and subcommittees for it. It tends to come up with ideas like the Clipper chip (a way of controlling cryptographic technology) and the V chip (to control children's access to nasty television programs). When the government becomes paralyzed by bickering and partisan maneuvers (which is how we Americans like it), it's always safe to roll out a new chip; in today's techno-mythology, chips are like tribal fetishes that can be waved around in times of stress as a vague indication that something is being done about some troublesome informational problem or other. Recently a lot of worrying has been done about the Internet. People who are concerned about anarchy tend to see it as a thrumming hive of villainy, where crazed extremists exchange nerve-gas recipes and whip themselves into a frenzy by exchanging faulty information about black helicopters. People who are fearful about government see the Internet as the perfect tool for Big Brother.

40. Stephenson, Neal [WorldCat Identities]
Tomorrow through the past Neal Stephenson and the project of global modernization ( Book ) Ekstrapolatiivne kirjutamine tulevikukirjutuse poeetikast by Jaak
http://orlabs.oclc.org/identities/lccn-n82-269163
Wed Sep 1 02:18:59 2010 UTC lccn-n82-269163 lccn-nb2001-80402 George, Frederick lccn-nr99-20943 Bonnefoy, Jean trl lccn-no96-13673 Dufris, William nrt lccn-no2004-53217 lccn-no2002-88170 Romero, Pedro Jorge trl lccn-n95-36371 Wiltsie, Jennifer nrt lccn-no2007-141787 Gilbert, Tavia nrt lccn-no2002-16712 Wyman, Oliver nrt lccn-n79-7443 Newton, Isaac Sir nc-bbc audiobooks america BBC Audiobooks America Stephenson, Neal Stephenson, Neal Science fiction Adventure fiction Suspense fiction Historical fiction Adventure stories Humorous fiction Code and cipher stories Mystery fiction Spy stories College stories Political campaigns PresidentsElection Biological weapons College students Terrorism Operating systems (Computers) Audiobooks Environmentalists MassachusettsBoston Harbor MassachusettsBoston Hazardous wastes American fiction Virtual reality Science fiction, American Revolutions Quests (Expeditions) Young women Audiobooks Nanotechnology ChinaShanghai Political fiction Suspense fiction Kings and rulersSuccession Newton, Isaac,Sir,1642-1727 Criminals Counterfeiters Historical fiction France Mutiny Great Britain Single mothers Treasure troves Pirates Adventure stories Women spies Alchemists Scientists Eighteenth century Seventeenth century Philosophy Life on other planets Monasteries Disasters Mathematics Data encryption (Computer science) Cryptography World War (1939-1945) History Science fiction Fiction book sw040631785:lccn-n82-269163 True book Stephenson, Neal

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