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Powell's Staff:
Five Book Friday: In Memoriam
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Every year, the booksellers at Powell’s submit their Top Fives: their five favorite books that were released in 2023. It’s a list that, when put together, shows just how varied and interesting the book tastes of Powell’s booksellers are. I highly recommend digging into the recommendations — we would never lead you astray — but today...
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Brontez Purnell:
Powell’s Q&A: Brontez Purnell, author of ‘Ten Bridges I’ve Burnt’
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Rachael P.:
Starter Pack: Where to Begin with Ursula K. Le Guin
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Ready Player One
by
Cline, Ernest
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Synopses & Reviews
ISBN13:
9780307887436
ISBN10:
030788743X
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Awards
2011 Powell's Staff Top 5s
4.9
51
What Our Readers Are Saying
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Average customer rating 4.9 (51 comments)
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Peter Lee
, January 02, 2013
Awesome book. Read it 3 times in 3 months when I first got it.
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imstagecrafty
, January 01, 2013
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I LOVED this book! Anyone who grew up in the 80's and has any sort of video game addiction will too.
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brandijgray
, January 01, 2013
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Fav. Book!
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ArlVABeerGuy
, January 01, 2013
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Fantastic -- like a Snow Crash for the 21st century. Very highly recommended.
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annalise
, January 01, 2013
I haven't enjoyed a book this much in a long time. There's a quest, and a guy and a girl, and all kinds of cool references to things I remember ... and the "good guys" win. :) It's a wonderful read!
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lamassu
, January 01, 2013
(view all comments by lamassu)
If you like video games, arcade games, the eighties, or dystopian science fiction, you should definitely read this book. As a person who likes all four I can honestly say it is one of the most enjoyable reads I've had this year. At points I found myself wanting to put it down and savor it but as I finished in less than three days clearly that didn't work. I'd say this book is on the border between Young Adult and Adult books. You could argue some of the characterizations might be a little weak or too stereotypical for straight adult fiction, but the reality is that if you accept this as a YA or border book all those weaknesses go away and you are left with one hell of an enjoyable story. Again, this book hit on multiple favorite topics of mine, thus the five stars. That said, I have a hard time imagining anyone who is looking for an enjoyable read, and meets the criteria at the begining of the review, not really liking this book.
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elizabeth scott
, January 01, 2013
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Fabulous book! I loved the throwback geek history that the author intertwined in the novel.
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PAULINE BROWN
, January 01, 2013
It has been a long time since I have come across a book that I just hated to put down. It was gripping, exciting with just enough anxiety causing moments to make it hard to leave. A wonderful tale for any age.
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Melissa Skipton
, January 01, 2013
Loved this book! Ready Player One is an engaging read about a cast of gamers working (some cooperatively, some independently) to solve an eccentric game designer's final puzzle. Packed with references to '80s culture it was a happy trip down memory lane. While it has a 'Charlie and the Chocolate Factory' feel, it's an original work.
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EdwardjK
, December 31, 2012
(view all comments by EdwardjK)
"Ready Player One" is a very quick read. I completed the entire book in two days. The story is fast-paced and very engaging. There are a few parts where I thought the author got tired of writing and breezed through the story. But overall, I thought the story is well-written. Look for this to be in the movies in a year or so - much like "Q&A".
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lilianxcheng
, July 17, 2012
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I completely fell in love with Ready Player One. At first, I was skeptical about the deluge of eighties/video game culture, but then I gradually didn't even care if I had no idea what the book was referencing and just wanted to go along for the ride. I always like my books to carry a deeper meaning, something to be pondered after the last page is turned-and I was delighted to find it here; Ready Player One isn't simply an adventurous brown bags to riches story, but more importantly, it's about how advancing technology may not be all that glitters and virtual reality has a cost. Ready Player One is just so fun and utterly addicting-like a video game. Every time I put it down, it would nudge at me in the corner of mind, time just slipped away while I was immersed in the novel. Now I see why this was amongst the top Sci-fi books of 2011; it's definitely my favorite read of the year so far. The Protagonist, Wade Watts aka. Parzival: I admit, Wade is not the ideal knight in shining armor quester: he dedicates every minute of his spare time playing video games, immersed in virtual reality, and studying a dead guy. He spends 24-hours a day holed up in his apartment, ignoring the real world while he explores OASIS; this guy just screams wimp: he doesn't know how to deal with the real world, so he runs away from it. Aside from his impractical quest, he doesn't have a life, nor does he have "real" friends (at one point he buys a sex doll and talks to a computer.) Yet, we love following his journey, seeing him grow as an adult. Halliday Creator of OASIS, socially inept, but filthy rich. He is also the most enigmatic character. Which leads me to ask: how could Halliday, being so removed from the real world, possibly even code such realistic worlds and characters? This guy didn't even talk to people and basically locked himself in a room for decades. It's A Geek Fest: I'm completely clueless about 80s culture, and the references were just endless. The only thing I knew about classic video games was from a Steve Jobs biography I painstakingly read during high school (which was actually more than you'd think.) I didn't find it a big hindrance, and I'm sure the fans would love it more than I (and I already love this book to bits.) Romance: There's a slight love story which I thought was was sweet, but Wade still came off a desperate fanboy and socially inept. I know most things worth having are worth fighting for but really-don't scare the girl into thinking you're a creep. I couldn't helping cringing while was reading the chat transcript between Wade and Art3mis; it reminded me so much of those cheesy, desperate, "romantic" Chatroulette/Omegle messages that would prompt any normal girl to disconnect (I'm a girl, I know.) I guess this is what happens when a guy writes romance. Ending: Fairytale, much? I wasn't a big fan of the whole "let's solve everything with money" strategy (it often comes off as lay writing to me), and really I don't see why it was necessary other than to fill up pages with descriptions of opulence, I get enough of that in romance novels with multi-billionaires. Why do you need to the most advanced virtual reality gear when the cheap stuff will work just fine (unless you want to be even further removed from reality I guess)? However, I thought the prize (the one behind the bookcase) at the end of the contest was brilliant. Absolutely brilliant. Plot and Worldbuilding Halliday's contest just screams fun, fun, fun-a virtual reality hunt for over two hundred billion dollars-who wouldn't want to win? It's a game within a game (inception!) But more compelling is the universe of OASIS which is the heart of the novel. OASIS is where dreams can come true, you can be anyone you want, science can be defied, planets can be built, stores can be set up, love can be found-and whose to say just because you don't meet a person face-to-face that your friendship isn't real? On the other side of the coin, the idea that people are living their real lives to feed a fake one is twisted. The lines between game and reality blur. In OASIS, you can go to a bar, order a drink, drink the drink with your avatar but that's only an illusion-you are still thirsty. Why would you spend money on a drink to watch yourself drink it, but never have it touch your lips? (But then again, I'm the girl who spent twenty bucks to dress up my MapleStory character, only to have my friends tell me my character looked ridiculous with fat lips) And the latest technology to make the simulation feel more real boggle my mind: why anyone would want to actually "feel" the sensation of being shot with laser rays is beyond me. Overall, I loved the novel despite a few minor caveats. I found myself rereading paragraphs just so I could savor the story. 372 pages have never felt so short. I highly recommend this book to everyone who loves an adventure, except maybe my grandparents...they can barely even check their email. Just be prepared to sit on that couch for hours, because you won't be able to tear your eyes away.
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RadicalRabbit
, January 28, 2012
I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book! It was a lot of fun. :)
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lacurtsinger
, January 21, 2012
As a non-gamer, I was sceptical that I would enjoy this book, but went for it after reading so many awesome reviews. Surprised as anyone that it makes the top of my list! It was entertaining and fast paced...he even threw in a little romance! The 1980s trivia was a trip down memory lane too. Love, love, love this book!
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russrpm
, January 20, 2012
Fun read by first time author. Dystopian novel where everyone's real life is a squalid existence. To escape there is the game, a total immersion virtual reality. The hero and the rest of the world are searching for clues that will make the winner the game master for the entire world. Fun read. Appropriate for young adults.
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Nicole Caputo
, January 19, 2012
Very enjoyable and memorable...like a nostalgice trip to the 80's with a Willy Wonka time traveling edge.
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groceryboy
, January 19, 2012
Please read. To put it simply, this is a fun book.
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erinroseparade
, January 19, 2012
(view all comments by erinroseparade)
This book is chock full of fun -- 80s references galore, as the reader is immersed in a dystopian world. This is a great book for nerds and non-nerds alike.
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Nathan Adams
, January 19, 2012
Ready Player One is more than a scifi book, it is a love story, a story about friendship, a warning about the direction our society is heading, and a heck of a good read. For those of us born in the early seventies it is a flash back to the time when we were growing up and John Hughes was the king of Film, Oingo Boingo was in your walkman, and a pocket full of quarters bought an afternoon of fun at the local arcade. This book made me laugh out loud and openly cry and I would not have it any other way. I cannot recommend this book enough and everyone I know who has read it from my 70 year old mother to my 16 year old daughter have loved it.
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erinroseparade
, January 19, 2012
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This book is chock full of fun -- 80s references galore, as the reader is immersed in a dystopian world. This is a great book for nerds and non-nerds alike.
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Robb Wijnhausen
, January 19, 2012
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A really enjoyable trip to the future back to the 80s. The prose is well-paced and the characters actually have some credible flesh on them. A really nice change of pace for me!
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Kim Jereczek
, January 19, 2012
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This was a fantastic book! Eighties culture and gaming lore were well-integrated into the story line. I actually read this book in one sitting; I just could not put it down.
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Dean Bryant
, January 19, 2012
A great story well-told and fun as all get-out. What more can you ask for in a book? Not the "best" but it sure was my favorite book of 2011.
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alibeale
, January 19, 2012
(view all comments by alibeale)
i have quite a few books i love for 2011, but this book is so fun, i'll pick it as my favorite. one of my favorite book things is a quest, and this book is a really fun quest, with a super cool hero. i love the bleak world that's created, and of course, the fact that the underdogs win. loved it!
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melomane
, January 15, 2012
Really enjoyed this thought-provoking, oft funny, sometimes freaky book. At the beginning, it was simply a fun read, due to the Nostalgia factor. It took some time, then this story developed into a delightful tapestry of nostalgia, pop culture references, characters and odd settings. It was a fun ride! By the end, I was so captivated I found an Anti-Sixers t-shirt & the Spotify playlist. Highly recommended to anyone who grew up in the 80's, gamers, music lovers, or lovers of quirky books. Ready Player One has broad appeal.
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Mitchell Friedman
, January 13, 2012
I don't know how well this will work for someone much older or much younger than me. It is ridiculously grounded in the 70's and 80's. There are so many popular culture references, it should have been exhausting. But instead I just plain loved this book. It is yet another book set in an online world - and I am a sucker for these books - whether they are This Is Not A Game or For The Win - and yet it felt like more. Obsessive underdogs versus evil corporations and just a little bit of Willy Wonka. I am very much looking forward to a re-read of this book.
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Frances Langum
, January 09, 2012
Excellent book. My favorite of 2011. I also recommend Will Wheaton's reading in the audiobook version.
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Michael Miller
, January 09, 2012
(view all comments by Michael Miller)
I had a lot of books that blew me away this past year...but I daresay none of them were quite as (overall) fun and nostalgic as this one. All the 80's geek culture one could possible cram in to one book is here, and yet it felt very organic in how it was arranged. Nothing felt forced - and I cared about the characters and their journey throughout. Just an incredibly witty and hilarious take on what the resurrection of hope in a dystopic future might look like.
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Reading in Berkeley
, January 04, 2012
(view all comments by Reading in Berkeley)
I could not put this book down. And I have never been much of a video/computer game player. However, the author does an excellent job of making the game-playing accessible and readable, resulting in a very entertaining, fast-moving book. I liked it so much, I even gave copies to a couple of friends as a Christmas present.
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rob alley
, January 03, 2012
a wonderful homage to the 1980s, bring back layers upon layers of memories. Celebrate your inner geek!
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Kristen N
, January 03, 2012
(view all comments by Kristen N)
Just plain fun, especially for Gen-Xers.
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Annie Simmons
, January 02, 2012
(view all comments by Annie Simmons)
Totally fun and engaging read creatively steeped in science fiction, games and rich with 80's nostalgia and sub-references (complete with footnotes!). A gem of a book, perfect for the nerd in all of us.
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Jessica Yopp
, January 02, 2012
The most fun I've had reading all year. Pure geeky enjoyment.
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Josh B
, January 02, 2012
(view all comments by Josh B)
Pure fun. A hugely entertaining book that manages to blend future-tech and nostalgia in equal parts.
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Georgia Popoff
, January 02, 2012
Engaging near-future novel that harkens the video game revolution and how digital media has changed the course of human experience and relationship. Clever, humorous, and dark in the foreboding of our future. The 80s references are like video gaming easter eggs throughout the book. Terrific first novel and a wonderful read.
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Pagoda
, January 01, 2012
(view all comments by Pagoda)
While definitely not the "best written" book of 2011, Ready Player One is almost certainly the most fun. Cline's world draws you in and doesn't let go, much like the game played by its characters. Gamers, tech geeks, sci if fans, D&D players, and geeks of every other kind: this book is for us!
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Joel Corcoran
, January 01, 2012
(view all comments by Joel Corcoran)
Probably the best science fiction novel I've read in a few years. Well-paced, well written, inventive and imaginative. One of the very few books I've read in the past year that completely captivated my attention to the point that I lost track of time.
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Rebekah Opperman
, January 01, 2012
This book was an absolutely wonderful combination of love and adventure stories , thoroughly infused with the very best kind of geekery. I can't recommend it highly enough - a perfect read for anyone who lived through the 1980s or enjoys a bit of science fiction. I'm already looking forward to a second read through of this one!
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Egg_salad
, January 01, 2012
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Not deep, but great fun!
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Jessica Martinez
, January 01, 2012
LOVED this. It's an epic 80s nerdfest with a fantastic premise, and the writing is really good too. One of my favorites of 2011, maybe even THE favorite of the year. Probably one of the most fun books I've ever read. And it had that whole dystopian thing I love (I'm obsessed with dystopian novels). A+++
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guinnessgal81
, January 01, 2012
(view all comments by guinnessgal81)
just plain and simple an awesomely fun read! i loved this book!! the 80s references were so much fun and totally took me back to being a kid! there are serious elements too though that bring an interesting idea of a bleak future where the only escape is into a 'virtual reality' simulation. i won't say more about it here but it reminds me of the harbinger of things to come underlying idea in the movie wall-e. overall though like i said it's just a really great book for any age and i'm impressed that it's the author's first novel. i would recommend this to anyone and it's one that i'll most likely read again down the road, it was that fun! ok my husband just finished the book today and says he would give it more than 5 stars if possible too! it became his favorite book off all time, that he's EVER read!! it was like you were so happy about the book but also so sad that the journey was over, and it was that way for both of us! he was basically in nerd-gasm central the entire book and we had so much fun talking about our favorite parts!! anyone and everyone should read this book!!!! it's definitely in my top 5 or top 3 books ever too and that's REALLY saying something for me!!!
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Kayte
, January 01, 2012
So good I read it back to back. As a child of the 80s and a gamer, I enjoyed this book immensely. Each chapter stirred of memories of growing up in the 80s, playing those games in my friend's house, dancing (badly) to the music and watching all those wonderful movies that Hollywood today seems determined to remake. I have recommended this book to friends and even gave my copy away to one of them. I will have to get another.
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MDS
, January 01, 2012
(view all comments by MDS)
Innovative, imaginative, intriguing. The characters of Ready Player One are as fascinating in their virtual lives as in the "real" world of 2044. Social interaction has evolved, economic disparities have grown, but a treasure hunt may save--or ruin-- the world. The references to 80's & 90's gameplaying are amusing and integral to the storyline. This book has multi-generational appeal. In our family, 40 year olds, 60 year olds and 14 year olds are all hoping for a sequel. This is a book to read and share--and a writer who is going on my watch-for list.
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Marlene Harris
, January 01, 2012
(view all comments by Marlene Harris)
This book had everything it could possibly need. There’s a quest. There’s a love story. It’s a coming-of-age story. It’s an homage to videogaming. There are pop-culture references to every cult classic of science fiction and fantasy literature imaginable. There’s an evil empire to be conquered. I couldn’t have asked for more.
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mklein66
, January 01, 2012
The most enjoyable, propulsively readable book of 2011.cline's story takes place in both a dystopian future and the virtual world of cyberspace, each one believable and fully realized. No other book in 2011 kept me reading late into the night, nor provided as much gleeful, geek-inspired pleasure.
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my name is jonas
, December 21, 2011
(view all comments by my name is jonas)
Quite easily one of the best books I read in 2011 and maybe one of my favorite books of all time. We'll see if it stands up after I've read it a second time.
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Cynthia Burmester
, September 30, 2011
(view all comments by Cynthia Burmester)
I'm over half way through this now - and it's one of the most fun reads I can recall in a long long time. Though I get occasional lapses of sadness that the near future portrayed here in which most of the world is poor but lives, works, & plays within a virtual world that takes Second Life, Netflix streaming, MMO gaming to the ultimate level.
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Cynthia Burmester
, September 28, 2011
(view all comments by Cynthia Burmester)
I'm about an 8th of the way into this and as an old-timer gaming & pop-culture geek I am LOVING it. Written by the writer/director of the movie "Fanboys" I can already picture the movie he'll make out of this dystopian tale of a teenager trying to escape his meager existence by completely the ultimate adventure quest to achieve a prize worth several fortunes.
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lwad61
, September 21, 2011
(view all comments by lwad61)
What a gas! Ready Player One is so much fun to read you'll wish you hadn't finished it so you could read it for the first time. The world in 2044 is basically circling the drain. Fossil fuels are almost completely exhausted and the poor live in trailer parks where the units are stacked on top of each other to maximize land use. Most of the populace maintains sanity by avoiding "real life" and living virtually in the Oasis online world. Wade Watts, through his avatar Parzival, spends most every hour he is not in his online school trying to solve the riddle left by OASIS' creator when he died. Somewhere in his multiverse James Halliday has hidden three keys that open three gates. Whoever makes his or her way through the third gate first inherits Halliday's billions. Many "gunters" have given up on the quest after five fruitless years of searching, but Parzival's careful study of 80s pop culture finally pays off and he finds the Copper Key to the first gate. A friend and an admired blogger follow him, but as the leaders' names are posted on the scoreboard, the Dark Empire of Innovative Online Industries grinds into action and soon real people in the real world are dying not so mysteriously and Wade and his friends are on the run in and out of OASIS. Some gaming chops and a working knowledge of 80s music, movies, and arcade games is helpful but not necessary in enjoying this crackerjack of a futuristic adventure with enough thought-provoking themes to make it even more than the very fine escape fiction it already is.
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Greg Thomas
, September 18, 2011
(view all comments by Greg Thomas)
Who would have thought I would have to go to 2040 to get the biggest dose of the 80's I have seen in one book! This book does a wonderful job of reminding you of the joys of being a teenager in the 80's complete with the Geek OASIS of all time. If you enjoyed D&D, comics, john hughes movies, Onigo Bonigo, etc and I do mean etc than this it the book for you. Also complete with nods to Gibson, Stephenson and other modern sci-fi writers. This book can make you laugh, remember and think about where we are headed as a society today if we don't change things. Pick it up and head back to the future.
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Egg_salad
, September 11, 2011
(view all comments by Egg_salad)
I picked up this book on Saturday and finished reading by Sunday afternoon. A thoroughly enjoyable, immersive book. The concept is a truly original way to incorporate all sorts of 80s geekdom into a book and make it relevant. If you are at all a fan of the geek pantheon from the 1980's should read this book now.
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czelticgirl
, September 02, 2011
(view all comments by czelticgirl)
This is the most fun book I've read in a long time. A bit sci-fi, a bit adventure story, and a real love letter to '80s pop culture and video games. You'll cheer on the main characters as they race against the rest of the world -- and each other -- to solve a series of riddles and complete challenges on the way to winning the prize of a lifetime. If you have any geek tendencies at all, this book is a must-read.
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Product Details
ISBN:
9780307887436
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication date:
08/16/2011
Publisher:
PENGUIN RANDOM HOUSE
Pages:
384
Height:
1.26IN
Width:
6.40IN
Thickness:
1.25
Copyright Year:
2011
Author:
Ernest Cline
Subject:
Science Fiction and Fantasy-A to Z
Subject:
General Fiction
$30.00
New Hardcover
Ships in 1 to 3 days
Qty
Store
20
Local Warehouse
10
Remote Warehouse
More copies of this ISBN
Used, Hardcover, Starting from $14.95
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