Termination Shock: A Novel
Termination Shock: A Novel book cover

Termination Shock: A Novel

Price
$11.21
Format
Hardcover
Pages
720
Publisher
William Morrow
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0063028050
Dimensions
6 x 1.69 x 9 inches
Weight
1.89 pounds

Description

“With meticulously rendered action scenes, surprising plot twists, relatable, off-kilter characters and charming dialogue, [Stephenson's] books are page-turners. His latest proves no exception . . . Termination Shock deals brilliantly and innovatively with our era’s most pressing existential matter—while delivering stratospheric gigatons of carefully engineered delight.” — Washington Post "This book is the rare climate thriller that's realistic about political stonewalling in the face of disaster yet unafraid to imagine a possible future where people might actually come together and try to save civilization. The kind of climate-change fiction we all need." — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “The novel is classic Stephenson: fiercely intelligent, weird, darkly witty, and boldly speculative. . . . Stephenson has become one of the most revered science fiction writers of his time.”xa0 — Publishers Weekly "An enthralling and thought-provoking read." — Buzzfeed "Neal Stephenson has never been afraid of engaging with big ideas within genre forms, and Termination Shock might be his most visionary, and timely, book yet." — Chicago Review of Books "Stephenson is one of speculative fiction’s most meticulous architects. . . . Termination Shock manages to pull off a rare trick, at once wildly imaginative and grounded.” — New York Times Book Review "Arguably no sci-fi writer has the specific combination of vision, reach, and ardent fandom that Stephenson does . . . . He is the premiere chronicler of the foundation myths of Silicon Valley and its adjacent culture—of its high self-regard, of disruptive innovation, of the world that nerds built.” — Wired “Raises genuinely interesting issues about the geopolitics of a warming world.” — American Purpose "Imaginative and utterly realistic." — Bookbub “Stephenson isn’t just playing with words, he’s playing with ideas, and he isn’t joking either. He is sci-fi’s great contrarian, and Fall deserves to be rated as one of the great novels of our time, prophetically and philosophically.” — Wall Street Journal on Fall; or, Dodge in Hell “Axa0one-of-a-kind synthesis of daring and originality, unafraid to venture into wild and unmapped conceptual territory.” — New York Times Book Review on Fall; or, Dodge in Hell “ Fall is at once science fiction and fantasy, with quantum computing enabling what amounts to magic, and while Stephenson spins out a pleasingly plausible vision of our near future, he carves out his most comfortable position in the uncertain nexus where that future becomes past and we rewrite our own apocrypha. Vintage Stephenson, which is to say it’s like nothing he’s ever written.”xa0 — Wired “Neal Stephenson’s Fall explores higher consciousness, the internet’s future, and virtual worldbuilding in one mind-blowing adventure.”xa0 — Slate “Stephenson devotees with a taste for Tolkienesque fantasy will revel in the author’s imaginative world building . . . . Still, there are enough futuristic, envelope-pushing ideas here, especially related to AI and digital consciousness, to keep even nonfans and science buffs intrigued.” — Booklist [starred review] on Fall; or, Dodge in Hell “There’s a lot going on here—stylistic flourishes, comedic pratfalls, romance and science—but it’s handled deftly. Those familiar with Stephenson will recognize his humor and ideas.”xa0 — Washington Post on The Rise and Fall of D.O.D.O. Neal Stephenson is the bestselling author of the novels Reamde , Anathem , The System of the World , The Confusion , Quicksilver , Cryptonomicon , The Diamond Age , Snow Crash , and Zodiac , and the groundbreaking nonfiction work In the Beginning . . . Was the Command Line . He lives in Seattle, Washington.

Features & Highlights

  • New York Times
  • Bestseller
  • From Neal Stephenson—who coined the term “metaverse” in his 1992 novel
  • Snow Crash
  • —comes a sweeping, prescient new thriller that transports readers to a near-future world in which the greenhouse effect has inexorably resulted in a whirling-dervish troposphere of superstorms, rising sea levels, global flooding, merciless heat waves, and virulent, deadly pandemics.
  • “Stephenson is one of speculative fiction’s most meticulous architects. . . .
  • Termination Shock
  • manages to pull off a rare trick, at once wildly imaginative and grounded.” —
  • New York Times Book Review
  • One man—visionary billionaire restaurant chain magnate T. R. Schmidt, Ph.D.—has a Big Idea for reversing global warming, a master plan perhaps best described as “elemental.” But will it work? And just as important, what are the consequences for the planet and all of humanity should it be applied?
  • Ranging from the Texas heartland to the Dutch royal palace in the Hague, from the snow-capped peaks of the Himalayas to the sunbaked Chihuahuan Desert,
  • Termination Shock
  • brings together a disparate group of characters from different cultures and continents who grapple with the real-life repercussions of global warming. Ultimately, it asks the question: Might the cure be worse than the disease?
  • Epic in scope while heartbreakingly human in perspective,
  • Termination Shock
  • sounds a clarion alarm, ponders potential solutions and dire risks, and wraps it all together in an exhilarating, witty, mind-expanding speculative adventure.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(2.2K)
★★★★
25%
(1.8K)
★★★
15%
(1.1K)
★★
7%
(503)
23%
(1.7K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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More like a Neal fanfic than a Neal book.

I am a big fan of Neal Stephenson's, having read all of his books, most of them multiple times. What worries me is that I have almost no desire to re-read this one (or his last book, Fall). In both cases I think it's because I'm so sad at what might have been. No spoilers here.

I can't escape the feeling that I was reading a fanfic. All the Stephenson hallmarks are there: a realistic sci-fi future; cleverly extended tech based on what already exists; tons of geology and references to terrain (I think I saw the word "alluvial" at least twice); traveling around the world; and of course the Pacific northwest. (side note: I just realized this might be his only book with no hackers in it - maybe that's the problem.) But all of his funny prose, his subtle social commentary, his insights into how a complicated piece of tech works...all that is gone and replaced by pale copies.

For example:
-We all know how a gun works - you don't have to spend 30 pages explaining how to make a big one work. We definitely don't need a tour of it where the two most interesting characters just listen to other people talk.
-Calling the USA a mess and a hapless laughingstock on the world stage may be true, and more so a few decades into the future, but if your book doesn't give any examples then you're just taking cheap shots.
-The most interesting character, explained from the first pages as being good with drones, never does anything cool with drones.
-Chekhov's corollary: if you spend all of acts one and two setting up a powerful country's secret, shady and scary military prowess, then in act three you had better make them do something. And if you spend the entire book making an antagonist character likable and we become sympathetic to their cause, why wouldn't you let them interact in any real way with the other interesting characters?
-etc.

People complain that Stephenson can't write women. I'm not one so it's hard to argue one way or the other. But the main female character, a smart and tech-savvy Dutch royal, doesn't get anything interesting or fun to do! All she does is go around listening to other people talk about stuff, so she's just proxy for a narrator. I thought it was going to be much cooler, since in the first couple of pages she crashes a jet in Texas. So yeah, he dropped the ball on his only big female role here. The other women in the book were just ladies-in-waiting so they didn't do anything interesting either.

People complain that Stephenson can't write endings. I used to disagree vehemently with this, as I loved the endings of most of his books, especially the ones people complained were bad. But first with Fall, and again here with Termination Shock, I found myself thinking with a hundred pages to go that there's no way that he is going to wrap this thing up in any way that is interesting, comprehensive or satisfying. I'd have settled for one of those three but got none. Neal, most of your fans love the fact that you write big books, because it means you can pay attention to tying up all the cool ideas and loose threads! Make this book twice as long, and it would have been five times as good.

I blamed DODO being bad on his co-author, and I blamed Fall being bad on being too ambitious with cool ideas. But maybe he just doesn't write good books anymore.
162 people found this helpful
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This is FICTION

Haven't read the book yet, so I'll reserve judgement, but simply responding to Meletanmuse's review, the one titled "Terminally fatuous":

I suggest you look up the definition of the word "fiction"
67 people found this helpful
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Dull. Long. Did I say dull?

What a disappointment. Big, hefty book. Interesting title. First chapter gets the action going. Then things slowly, ever so slowly, grind to a glacial, halting, laborious
slog through chapter after chapter of endless introductions of new, peripheral characters and interwoven plot threads that never seem to come together but one keeps turning the pages hoping for something, anything. I began skipping sentences, then paragraphs, then pages as I skimmed my way along. Too much exposition, detail, and background on everything. In the end, when it finally came, I just put it down in exasperation..did I really waste my time on this overwrought wordy tome? Yes I did. A waste of time. Do yourself a favor - run the other way..
18 people found this helpful
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Not Neil's best

No real point to this other than to say after reading everything NS(top 3 writers I enjoy) has written, books, Termination Shock is below par to NS past efforts. Most of the time I can't stop turning the pages of his books, but this time I found myself not caring.

I missed the usual meaty, deep and complex topics NS brings to his books. TS was missing all of that.

Sadly, if you don't read this, you didn't miss anything.
8 people found this helpful
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I'm a Stephenson super-fan, but...

...this one didn't do it for me. Slow, plodding, most of the character development was weak (Saskia and TR dialogue reminds me of Elaine from Seinfeld with her exclamation point obsession). Red and Laks I liked, however. The plot - geoengineering - is interesting, but awfully one-dimensional. And while Stephenson's other novels have been forward-thinking/progressive with characters, I couldn't help but think he filled this story with woke tropes that came off as forced and contrived. Not unhappy with it, just that his other work is so much better.
7 people found this helpful
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Geo-engineering fixes can get complicated

Termination Shock is a climate change science fiction (cli-fi) novel centered around a risky geo-engineering scheme. The effects of climate change are starting to worry people and Texas billionaire T. R. Schmidt has a plan to reverse global warming by injecting sulfur dioxide into the upper atmosphere, like the volcano Pinatubo did in 1991. This is a risky form of geo-engineering and it will result in winners and losers around the world. The billionaire has invited guests representing places that are being ravaged by sea level rise to a demonstration of his sulfur gun. One of the guests is the Queen of Netherlands. The main plot is centered on T.R. Schmidt and his associates and guests and other characters representing the potential victims of his scheme and the ensuing conflict. Naturally other powerful political powers get involved as well.

The main plot of the story is a good one and the book touches on an important topic that the author understands and clearly has researched and thought about. The character development is excellent, the technical details are nice, and the geo-politics interesting and well thought through. Much of the plot takes place in Texas, where I live. I’m originally from Sweden so I understand parliamentary democracies that are monarchies and their royalties. I am concerned about the topic and I’m an engineer and I know something about the technical stuff, and in addition one of the main characters hunt wild pigs for a living, which I’ve done, so I felt I related to the book.

The author has a talent for inventing wild and interesting plot elements. However, that can also be a weakness. I felt that some of the sub-plots and character development to be tedious (that’s why it’s 720 pages), and hard to believe. For example, at the beginning of the novel the Queen crashes a jet-airplane into a herd of wild pigs chased by a giant alligator as well as a wild pig hunter whose daughter had been eaten by one of the wild pigs. Also, the description of the Queens sex life was both explicit and silly. Basically, some plot elements would have been better left out, so four stars instead of five from me. Naturally, I still recommend the book.
6 people found this helpful
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Embarrassingly Bad

If you enjoyed “an inconvenient truth”, you will love this...
4 people found this helpful
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Another bad Stephenson

I was once a huge fan of this author.

I had heard this book was a return to earlier form.

It was not. I am disappointed I took the time to read it all.
4 people found this helpful
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Recommend this was good.

Very good story almost too real could possibly or probably would happen. Exciting and intertaning. Great characters.
4 people found this helpful
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300 pages in and nothing but crappy anecdotes

I have read about a thousand disjunct things and still no actual story of interest. I think this person has some form of personality disorder, where every little damn thing needs 100 pages. Make up for the queen of the Netherlands, 10 pages. Wild hogs, seemingly 100 pages.

Juesus, I give up.
3 people found this helpful