Ask HN: Recommend any good business/hacker fiction?
I just finished re-reading Neal Stevenson's Cryptonomicon for the third time today, and I cannot get enough of the modern part of the story.
It's basically about a very HN-ish nerd named Randy who gets embroiled in a huge international venture to create the world's first data haven, with plenty of in-depth discussion on technical topics like Van Eck Phreaking and more absurd ones like pantyhose fetishes.
Has anyone here read anything along the lines of this? A book about a hacker/entrepreneur who sets out to change the world and comes across all sorts of wacky scenarios?
46 comments
[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 108 ms ] threadOn a related note, I recommended Cryptonomicon to a co-worker who was complaining how much she spent on books (she typically buys one hardback per week) and how much storage space she had devoted to books. I lent her my copy of Cryptonomicon and it took her about 4-5 weeks to finish. She was in for a good bit of teasing about the apparent 'quality' of her normal fare. IIRC, the term 'bodice-ripper' was tossed about. ;-)
* "The Bonfire of the Vanities" by Tom Wolfe. The classic novel of 80s Wall Street at its peak.
* "American Psycho" by Bret Easton Ellis. A pretty terrifying picture of greed and excess, again on 80s Wall Street. If you've seen the movie, you know what to expect -- only in greater detail.
* "Atlas Shrugged" by Ayn Rand. Some people hate it, but others find it an inspirational novel. The heroes are driven, smart, competitive entrepreneurs; the antagonists are greedy, pilfering government regulators. Whether or not you like this will probably depend on your pre-existing ideological preference.
I'm sure there are others that I'm forgetting...
It never occurred to me that the book might have other purposes than that. I think I'm going to check out The Fountainhead first though.
I just remembered another incredible novel that I haven't read in years - Noble House by James Clavell; it's a novel about two warring business empires, set in 1930s Hong Kong.
As does Snow Crash.
But Stephenson made a reference to exactly that idea in Cryptonomicon, so I don't know what he was thinking.
http://www.amazon.com/Man-Who-Sold-Moon/dp/0671578634
(spoilers: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Man_Who_Sold_the_Moon)
Then, for fun, go on to The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, wherein a great acronym TANSTAAFL is introduced.
* David Leavitt's The Indian Clerk deals extensively with math (http://jseliger.wordpress.com/2007/12/14/the-indian-clerk).
* Joel Spolsky's The Best Software Writing isn't fiction but is worth reading.
* I'll reiterate Tom Wolf's The Bonfire of the Vanities and A Man in Full.
* Philip Pullman's His Dark Materials trilogy is nominally aimed at adolescents, but people of any age can enjoy it.
* Michael Tolkin's The Player is partially about the business of film, as is its sequel, The Return of the Player.
If you're curious about more, send me an e-mail; I write a book blog at http://jseliger.com , and a lot of the reviews/commentaries would probably be of interest to hackerish types.
I can and do on a regular basis: books that don't have sufficient merit within a relatively small number of pages aren't going to keep me till the end, and I'm not masochistic enough to read through every single book I start in the hopes of "understanding" it.
Best black-hat hacker short story goes to "Burning Chrome" by William Gibson (last story in the anthology of the same name).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J_R
Also loved Microserfs and JPod by Douglas Coupland.
Greg Egan: Permutation City, Quarantine
(More programmer's fiction than startup fiction.)
Agree they're more coder-fiction.
Charles Stross's Accelerando fits the bill perfectly, but it's way out there with singularity stuff, unlike Cryptonomicon, which may not be what you want. His Halting State is set in the near future, with a robbery of an MMORPG that involves real money with real bad guys getting involved.
Stealing the Network Series (1st two are great :) ),
Startup.com - the documentary
WEST RUN (2007)
Directed, Photographed, & Edited by Rajah Samaroo Written by Rajah Samaroo and Andrew Harrar Runtime: 43 mins Genre: cyberpunk thriller
Retired hacker Roland West gets lured back into the game when the headhunter Sebastian find him living off the grid. The stakes has never been so high, as West must outwit a conniving group of business leaders bent on collapsing the world market and US government.