The Diamond Age, or A Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer by Neal Stephenson

The Diamond Age Book Cover

If one word could describe The Diamond Age, or A Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer, it would be “surreal.” I think that this is one of the main reasons that it won the Hugo Award in 1996. The main setting for this novel by Neal Stephenson is in the middle 21st century Shangai, shifting briefly to other places such as Vancouver and London later on. Nanotechnology is heavily used at this time, especially in Matter Compilers, usually referred to as an M.C. Matter flows from the “Feed”, which comes from the “Source” of the raw materials used to create everything from food to household items. A Source is much like a power station, except that it transmits matter rather than energy.

This technology greatly affects the economy, because there is no need to harvest simple things like rice when they can be created by the M.C. Stephenson manages to integrate nanotechnology into every day life in a matter-of-fact sort of way, explaining the various functions of these tiny machines in plain English.

Rather than having specific countries as we do today, the world in The Diamond Age (of which diamonds are used for windows because they can be easily created with the M.C.) is split up into various phyles, or societal groups. A member of a phyle is refered to as a thete. The three greatest, or first-tier, phyles are New Atlantis, Nippon, and Han. There are many lesser phyles ranging from Mormons, Jews, Armenians, Navajos, Senderos, etc.

The most successful phyles fashion themselves to be Victorian, incorporating that style into their lives. In a world full of electronic communication the richest men prefer to paper newspapers, which is generally unheard of. The lesser phyles, such as the Celestial Kingdom and the Coastal Republic resent the greater phyles such as New Atlantis. This friction serves as one of the main plot lines in this novel.

One of the main characters is John Percival Hackworth, which is an engineer for nanotechnology. He has just finished with as a team leader in an immense project for Lord Finkle-McGraw who is at the top echelon of the elite as an Equity Lord in New Atlantis. Hackworth is given the task of creating a device for Lord Finkle-McGraw’s granddaughter, which is A Young Lady’s Illustrated Primer. This device is essentially an interactive book which is meant to teach and guide a young girl.

Hackworth decides that his daughter should also have a copy of this device, which creating would be a serious crime. He manages to smuggle the plans out of his work and bring them to Dr. X., which has a special black market Source and matter compilers which can create another copy for his daughter. All things go well until Hackworth gets mugged on his way back to his house. The “Primer” (as I will refer to it from here on) is carted away by a young boy named Harv which gives it to his sister Nell.

The Primer is not simply an interactive book; it teaches Nell a variety of skills from polite manners to martial arts (yes, martial arts). The programming incorporates real world events and integrates them into an ongoing story, of which involves “Princess Nell.” She goes on adventures with her various friends which are simply stuffed animals in the real world.

The Primer speaks to Nell through a “ractor”, or interactive actor, rather than using a computer generated voice. The character Miranda landed the role as voice actor for Nell’s Primer and simply reads a prompt which is generated by the Primer. Many of the lessons are not simply viewed by Nell, but are “ractives”, I’m assuming short for interactives. In these scenarios Nell is able to control the scene or lesson, trying again and again until she gets the correct result.

From here on out the novel gets exponentially more complex. It weaves through the main plotlines of Nell, Hackworth, Miranda. The main focus, however, is on Nell and her development from a 4 year old girl into a young woman. Each chapter is preceded by a unique one to two sentence summary of what is about to happen. I haven’t seen such summaries before, but according to Wikipedia this seems to emulate the style of Charles Dickens.

Part of the reason I liked this book was Neal Stephenson’s quirky humor. Kentucky Fried Chicken is considered to be a fancy place to eat, and is referred to as “The House of the Venerable and Inscrutable Colonel” when referred to in Chinese. This reminds me a bit of how pizza delivery is a booming business controlled by the mafia in Snow Crash. There are countless humorous insights to society and life in general interspersed throughout The Diamond Age. I really enjoyed this book, but the ending left me with a somewhat empty feeling. I think that anyone that reads this book would expect at least one more chapter to tie up some loose ends.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please prove you are a human * Time limit is exhausted. Please reload the CAPTCHA.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Related Post

The Icarus Hunt by Timothy ZahnThe Icarus Hunt by Timothy Zahn

Book Cover
I’m slowly chipping away at my collection of Timothy Zahn novels. I recently enjoyed reading Manta’s Gift, but I definitely enjoyed Icarus Hunt more. Rather than focusing on one alien race, Zahn spreads quite a few alien species throughout the book. There is constant action, enough so that the book hardly felt like 450 paperback pages long. I categorize this book as a cross between a Sci-Fi and mystery novel.
(more…)

I, Asimov: A Memoir by Isaac AsimovI, Asimov: A Memoir by Isaac Asimov

My favorite science fiction writer by far is Isaac Asimov (1920-1992). One of the main reasons I started this website was to document my re-reading of his Robot and Foundation books. I recount my introduction to his writing in my post celebrating his 90th birthdayThere I mention starting to read his autobiography. That actually was the first volume, In Memory Yet Green (1970) covering his life from 1920-1954. It was an out of print low quality hard back copy. I still have that volume, but for some reason I never got around to finishing it. My last bookmarked page was 167 of 708. His next volume was In Joy Still Felt (1980) covering his life from 1954-1978. I fully intended on reading both of those, then finally his third volume (for this review) I, Asimov: A Memoir (1992).

Since my post in 2010, I’ve shifted almost all of my reading to ebook formats. Unfortunately I could not find any of the old volumes on ebook. My physical copy of In Memory Yet Green sat on the shelf collecting dust, literally! Sometime last year there was a sale on this book on the Google Play Store for just a buck or two. I snatched it up immediately and put it on my short list to read after finishing John Scalzi’s Old Man’s War series which I was in the middle of at the time.

For a while I was frozen with indecision. Should I dig harder and try to find the first two volumes in ebook format? Drudge through the physical copy I had and then find the out of print second volume? Luckily I checked out some of the reviews. This third volume isn’t just 1978-(present at time of publish), but covers his entire life. The format is also not strictly chronological, but jumps from subject to subject. I was hesitant at first, partially from having a tendency to want to read things chronologically, even if they are published out of order (see my reading project). The more I thought about it, the closer I came to realizing it didn’t matter! I could read the third volume, then go back and read the first two, and maybe the third again! There is actually a 4th autobiography, It’s Been a Good Life (2002) that was edited after his death by his second wife Janet Jeppson Asimov. I plan on reading as well, possibly before the first two volumes.

If you are at all interested in Isaac Asimov, or science fiction in general, you must read this book. Having already had a false start on In Memory Yet Green, I can say I enjoyed this format better. Most “chapters,” which I will call topics, are at most five to ten pages in length. This makes for easy stopping points. I found myself reading many topics throughout the day, with several back to back during my lunches, where I normally spend most of my time reading. (more…)

So I have been a bit behind with my reviewsSo I have been a bit behind with my reviews

I’ve been a bad reviewer lately. I usually try to write my reviews right after viewing or reading but I haven’t had as much time to write them lately. I’ve been playing World in Conflict quite a bit lately, which competes with my reviews here. I should actually do a review for that sometime, since I spend so much time playing it. It takes place in an alternate reality where the Soviets invade the US in 1990. For more information in the meantime just click the link above.

So, here are the things I have watched so far, but have yet to review:

  1. Blade Runner – The Final Cut: (I’ve watched the movie, which was awesome, but I still have to work through the rest of the special features on the last disc)
  2. I am Legend (2007) – I’ve actually watched this twice, once with my Father while on vacation, and again with my wife
  3. Battlestar Galactica: Razor – Unrated Extended Edition

I’m also in the process of reading two books: Children of Dune by Frank Herbert, and The Age of Spiritual machines by Ray Kurzweil. The latter is not really science fiction, but I’m about half way through it and many of the ideas probably seemed like fiction back when it was published in 1999. Many of the predictions Kurzweil makes in the first half are fairly accurate, so I’m interested to see what he will say in the second half.

My next major milestone will be to read Chaos Theory, Asimov’s Foundations and Robots, and Herbert’s Dune: The Fractal Aesthetic of Epic Science Fiction.

That should keep me busy for a little while.