Neal Stephenson's Reamde opens with a target practice session at the Forthrast clan's annual Thanksgiving gathering. Various firearms -- shotguns, Glocks, assault rifles -- are discharged by uncles, ...
Author Neal Stephenson will be at the Tattered Cover LoDo on Friday and in advance of that appearance, we’ll have a Q&A with him tomorrow. In the meantime, we’re giving you a chance to win a copy of ...
Neal Stephenson's new novel begins with a family reunion in the Idaho panhandle, near the Canadian border, during which the "reserved, even hardbitten" men of the extended Forthrast clan engage in ...
Neal Stephenson's dazzling 1,042-page novel Reamde (yes, it's "read me" misspelled; pronounce it however you wish), is a brilliant book. But you should be seatbelted while reading it. In Reamde, a ...
The blurb on the back of my review copy of Neal Stephenson’s new novel, “Reamde,” described it as “his most accessible novel to date.” I frowned when I read those words: Accessible? This was supposed ...
Will there come a time when online war games might actually become real-life encounters? In Neal Stephenson’s book “REAMDE," one man’s imagination threatens his reality as a virus in his successful ...
EXCLUSIVE: Chris Weitz and Paul Weitz are bringing Neal Stephenson’s bestselling novel Reamde to the small screen. Chris Weitz is set to write and direct the series adaptation, which he and Paul will ...
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready... FICTION: CYBER CLASH Reamde by Neal Stephenson (William Morrow) The cyber-game world is central to Neal Stephenson’s fast-paced thriller, “Reamde,” but be ...
“Reamde” by Neal Stephenson (William Morrow, $18.99). New in paperback. The Seattle author’s New York Times best-seller puts an Iowa farmboy/draft dodger and marijuana smuggler/online-game magnate in ...
Sometimes when you’re reading Neal Stephenson, he doesn’t just seem like one of the best novelists writing in English right now; he seems like the only one. No other author embeds characters in an ...
Even imaginary worlds have crime. In real life, it might be drug trafficking, but online they call it gold farming. Virtual worlds, like World of Warcraft, are massive realms where millions of gamers ...