Since childhood, Raz has lived behind the walls of a 3,400-year-old monastery, a sanctuary for scientists, philosophers, and mathematicians. There, he and his cohorts are sealed off from the illiterate, irrational, unpredictable "saecular" world, an endless landscape of casinos and megastores that is plagued by recurring cycles of booms and busts, dark ages and renaissances, world wars and climate change. Until the day that a higher power, driven by fear, decides it is only these cloistered scholars who have the abilities ...
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Since childhood, Raz has lived behind the walls of a 3,400-year-old monastery, a sanctuary for scientists, philosophers, and mathematicians. There, he and his cohorts are sealed off from the illiterate, irrational, unpredictable "saecular" world, an endless landscape of casinos and megastores that is plagued by recurring cycles of booms and busts, dark ages and renaissances, world wars and climate change. Until the day that a higher power, driven by fear, decides it is only these cloistered scholars who have the abilities to avert an impending catastrophe. And, one by one, Raz and his friends, mentors, and teachers are summoned forth without warning into the unknown.
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Seller's Description:
Fine in Near fine jacket. Fine/Near fine. Atlantic Books, 2008. First UK edition-first printing(10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1). Brown hardback(gilt lettering to the spine, two small nicks on the edges of the cover and spine) in fine condition, with Dj(two small creases and nicks on the edges of the Dj cover) in near fine condition. Illustrated with b/w drawings. Nice and clean pages as new with two very small marks and ink mark on the outer edges, light shelf wear on the Dj cover.944pp including Note to the reader, glossary. Price un-clipped. A collectable first edition. Heavy book(approx 1.7 Kg).
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Good. All orders are dispatched within 1 working day from our UK warehouse. Established in 2004, we are dedicated to recycling unwanted books on behalf of a number of UK charities who benefit from added revenue through the sale of their books plus huge savings in waste disposal. No quibble refund if not completely satisfied.
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Fair. Item in acceptable condition including possible liquid damage. As well answers may be filled in. May be missing DVDs, CDs, Access code, etc. 100%Money-Back Guarantee! Ship within 24 hours! !
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Fine in Fine jacket. Book. Signed by Author(s) 1st ed/1st printing, SIGNED by the author on the title page. This book is square, solid, and unread; the boards are solid and unblemished, and the dust jacket is sharp and protected by a protective Brodart cover. No price clippings, no remainder marks. You'll buy a trenchcoat and slouch-brimmed hat, set up a false identity, and start watching 'The Imitation Game' over and over when this beauty gets to your door!
Any story that needs a dictionary to understand, is a work of an amateur. But obviously, if you have the right connections in the publishing world, you can become a success
MikeyfromBrooklyn
Jan 15, 2009
Interesting, but...
Neal Stephenson continues his uneven work in bringing together the worlds of pop science fiction and scientific theory. In Anathem, he uses a closed culture of monastic intelligentsia set in a world of technologically savvy "lay brothers", common laborers, artisans, poiticians, and other presumed philistines as a vehicle to play with ideas of general relativity and quantum mechanics.
Stephenson is better than anyone else I know in the art of lecturing on sophisticated scientific and philosophical ideas under the guise of long conversations among his characters -- and the characters themselves are believeable. But I found myself slogging toward the finish, as I did with two of the novels of the Baroque Cycle (I didn't try for three), rather than sprinting along, as I did with Cryptonomicon and his early work. In the end, I quit at the beginning of the last chapter, just checking the final page to see if there were to be a happy ending. Intellectually, the ending was pleasing, raising the question not of whether a happy ending was realistic, but whether reality was. But I no longer cared if THISending was going to be happy for THESE characters.
Creating a new culture in an unknown world also allowed Stephenson to play a few linguistic games -- inventing names for things that were similar to, but not the same as, the ones we use. A liturgical rite in the monastic culture, for example, is called an "aut": similar, I suppose, to the word for the burning of a heretic, "auto-da-fe": but it would have looked better in English as something like 'aute", I think, without losing the auditory pun. Likewise "vlor" as a contraction of "Vale lore" -- martial arts. English doesn't contract words made up of two single-syllable nouns (like "dog house" to "dgouse"). He just doesn't quite have the ear for this kind of thing that, say, Russell Hoban did in "Ridley Walker".
I will keep buying Neal Stephenson novels, hoping once more to be swept off my feet as I was by Cryptonomicon -- but for me, this one wasn't it.
Tennisdad
Dec 10, 2008
He's off again!
I had anxiously awaited publication of a new novel since I finished "The Baroque Cycle" more than 2 years ago. "Anathem" did not disappoint. Stephenson has continued his expansion of subject material to another world. His craftsmanship in creating a separate [though parallel]universe was created from more "whole cloth" than previous novels which had starting off points rooted in this world's culture. And this is only the underpinnings of the actual storyline which is as absorbing as his previous work. Creating a cloistered class of "intelligentsia" separated from the dross of "pop" culture and the standard political landscape gives him a unique opportunity for histronifaction which yields much food for thought into our own situation. I highly recommend this book .