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Miss Michael's Reviews > The Diamond Age: Or, a Young Lady's Illustrated Primer

The Diamond Age by Neal Stephenson
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really liked it

Stephenson is undoubtedly a good writer. I feel as though that's a trite thing to say, but I'm not talking about the overall story, I'm talking about the way each sentence is crafted. Also, I felt the need to read the book with a dictionary next to me, which isn't necessarily a bad thing, I suppose. As far as the overall story, there's a lot to like, plenty of varied characters, several story lines that are more closely woven than one might originally think, and plenty of action. There's a kind of girl power aspect to it all that's especially nice.

While it is set in what Stephenson imagines to be the not-too-distant future, it also has fairy tale elements that mostly stem from the Primer itself, although also from the very concept of a young girl embarking on adventures alone. There were also times (mostly near the end) when I was also reminded of The Wizard of Oz--without the cheesy "moral" we get in the film--and even Buffy--without the super powers. The Diamond Age very much seems to fit in with a long history of children's fantasy literature. Except this is for adults (think Guillermo Del Torro).
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Reading Progress

February 13, 2008 – Shelved
Started Reading
May 1, 2008 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-4 of 4 (4 new)

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James and how far are you into this one so far? :)


Miss Michael Not nearly far enough. I know, it's been on my shelf for like, 6 months. I suck.


RebKell I feel pretty much the same way about having a dictionary, I don't like to spend time looking up words, it ruins the flow for me. Until you've been reading one of his books for a while it's confusing at times distinguishing between his created jargon and actual words I don't know.


John Varga Wow, I can totally picture a Guillermo del Toro movie alongside Stephenson's books.


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