Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Tight, Smart, Funny, 3 April 2006
The Manuscript is dazzling. It's a tightly-plotted thriller, but it's also a terrific literary chronicle of our Electronic Age and the generation that grew up on the Internet. The writing's smart, sexy, and as funny in spots as it's dark in others. Fuchs writes with a real sense of style-even the e-mails are clever-and he's got a healthy dose of attitude about everything from technology to drugs to weapons. But I love this book because it has a soul, too. It's not afraid to ask the big questions about the Meaning of Life. And here's the kicker: it's not even afraid to answer them.
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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An Excellent Philosophical Thriller, 8 April 2006
While the cover of the book may make it appear so, The Manuscript is not your typical 'high-speed, action-packed thriller'. It is indeed 'high-speed', and incredibly 'action-packed', but it is smarter, funnier, more intricate, and surprisingly more inspiring than one might expect of the genre. Relating the race to recover a document that is storied to contain the final answers to The Big Questions about life, the universe, and everything, The Manuscript seamlessly incorporates ruminations on the nature of human existence into a plot filled with good guy versus bad guy, narrow escapes, technological tampering, and plenty of gunplay. One could compare it to the Da Vinci Code in its account of a modern-day perilous quest for a mystical artefact, except that the writing is more skilful, it doesn't incorporate any bad science, and it doesn't insult any world religions (well, at least not directly).
Fuchs creates an impressively large cast of diverse and well-conceived characters, whose divergent story-lines come together at a measured, but absorbing, pace. This novel is not about 'wham, bham, thank-you mam' action, but rather offers little 'tastes' of action as it builds up to its climax slowly, enjoying 'the ungentle ride' along the way, like a literary version of tantric sex.
While the snappy dialogue, profusion of hip, youthful characters, and in-depth descriptions of the ins and outs of the internet may appear to appeal only to a younger crowd, the novel's intelligent handling of everything from the history of philosophy to the rules of how to win a gunfight should appeal to anyone who enjoys what is, simply, a good read. The novel is certainly not for technophobes, but its savvy explanations of the inners workings of the internet do not require one to be a card-carrying computer geek to understand and enjoy the novel's technologically-embedded plot. And one cannot underestimate the enjoyment engendered by shameless philosophical and religious speculation. I read The Manuscript cover to cover, not being able to put it down throughout the long and unpleasant flight for which it was my chosen entertainment. Not only was I well-entertained, but also may have been, at least a little bit, enlightened.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Geeks and Guns, 13 Jun 2006
This excellent story revolves around the online search for a manuscript purported to have been written by the adventurer/traveller/all-round Renaissance man Sir Richard Burton which contains the secrets to life, the universe, and everything.
The two main protagonists are a sysadmin (who has a penchant for handguns) and his grad student friend at a college in Virginia. The immense cast of well-developed characters expands early and rapidly to encompass a security expert, an undercover cop, an underground team of well-trained self-appointed cyber-vigilantes known as the Angry Young Taoists, a BOFH/drug kingpin, and many, many more.
I won't give away any more of the plot.
Anyway, the action builds up early in the story, and then relentlessly ploughs on for a very long time, with many twists and turns and loads of gun battles, Mexican standoffs, and geekspeak*. And is very very cool.
If Tarantino ever got a techie streak and decided to start writing novels, he would come up with something awfully close to this. The style is very cinematic, but unlike a film, the action gives you more than just two hours of entertainment.
I look forward to future work from Mr. Fuchs...Good stuff.
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