297 pages

English language

Published Aug. 13, 2003 by Heinemann.

ISBN:
978-0-434-00817-9
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
52621474

View on OpenLibrary

4 stars (37 reviews)

Volume One of The Baroque Cycle (Not to be confused with Quicksilver: The Baroque Cycle #1)

Quicksilver is a massive, exuberant and wildly ambitious historical novel that's also Neal Stephenson's eagerly awaited prequel to Cryptonomicon--his pyrotechnic reworking of the 20th century, from World War II codebreaking and disinformation to the latest issues of Internet data privacy.

Quicksilver, "Volume One of the Baroque Cycle", backtracks to another time of high intellectual ferment: the late 17th century, with the natural philosophers of England's newly formed Royal Society questioning the universe and dissecting everything that moves. One founding member, the Rev John Wilkins, really did write science fiction and a book on cryptography--but this isn't history as we know it, for here his code book is called not Mercury but Cryptonomicon. And although the key political schemers of Charles II's government still have initials spelling the word CABAL, their names are all …

16 editions

reviewed Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson (The Baroque Cycle, #1)

Review of 'Quicksilver' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Sparked a strong historical curiosity - not something I come by naturally, but was unable to resist in the face of witch trials, pirate battles, all manner of landmark experiments, political sabotage, black plague, fire bombings, etc. It's obvious now that I'm a total sucker and will be lucky to emerge with any sense of separation of fact and fiction.

reviewed Quicksilver by Neal Stephenson (The Baroque Cycle, #1)

Review of 'Quicksilver' on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

Quicksilver is a book I've been reading for quite some time - according to Goodreads, I started this book on April 29, 2009! I'm not sure why it took so long. I guess it is pretty dense and it is a very big book (about 1,000 pages), but I really loved every minute of it. What a wonderful cast of characters, great writing and some exciting scenes. Hard to really describe in a nutshell. A very meandering book, written in many different styles. One chapter could be a mini-play, another chapter written as a letter, yet another a normal 3rd person chapter, it basically tells the story of three people - Daniel Waterhouse, an English intellectual who is a close friend and supporter of Isaac Newton; Jack Shaftoe, a swashbuckling adventurer and "King of the Vagabonds"; and the very pretty and whip smart Eliza, rescued by Jack from a Turkish …

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Subjects

  • Rogues and vagabonds -- Fiction
  • Seventeenth century -- Fiction
  • Puritans -- Fiction
  • Great Britain -- History -- Stuarts, 1603-1714 -- Fiction