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I am about enjoy a two week break in Spain where I expect to have lots of time for relaxing and reading.

I normally read a lot of non-fiction so I'm looking for novel suggestions.

If there is another Cryptonomicon out there I'd love to hear about it!

UPDATE: In the end I took four books including Quicksilver. Quicksilver was fantastic and I look forward to continuing the series. I was disappointed with Gen X (Coupland) and Pattern Recognition (Gibson). Upon arrival I also found The Monsters Of Gramercy Park (Leigh) which was enjoyable though sad. Thanks for all the recommendations, I'm sure to return to this list when I have more free time.

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I'm surprised no-one's mentioned Kim Stanley Robinson's Mars Trilogy yet. The first one is called (unsurprisingly) Red Mars and is followed by Blue Mars then Green Mars. You can probably guess the general theme! They're all fairly lengthy - just one of them would keep you busy a while!

I suppose you'd call it 'future history' as they give a pretty comprehensive view of what the colonisation of Mars might be like in the near future. It's fiction with quite a bit of politics, sociology, geography, technology and geology thrown in. Epic!

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"Failure Is Not an Option: Mission Control from Mercury to Apollo 13 and Beyond" by Gene Kranz.

From one review:

Gene Kranz was a flight director for most of the U.S. manned space program, and was on duty for some of the most critical events - including the first moon landing, and, of course the Apollo 13 accident.

In "Failure Is Not an Option," Kranz tells the story of Mission Control from the begining (he wrote some of the intial procedures manuals) through the Space Shuttle program. He shows how the ground controllers developed into a team, not only with each other, but with the astronauts on board the spacecraft.

Kranz may not be the most polished writer, but this is a first-person account from someone who helped make history. One of the things I really liked about the book is that Kranz not only took detailed notes during the missions (that was his first flight assignment), but he held on to them and used them to provide a more detailed account than I have seen before of the key missions from the perspective of Mission Control. He doesn't pull punches, and he's not afraid to admit mistakes, and this gives this book an air of honesty that you don't always find in an autobiography.

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"The First $20 Million Is Always The Hardest," Po Bronson

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Read Peopleware. It might look like a book only for managers, but it's filled with lots of great stories and tips about how to get in flow, how to not break flow and how to get motivated. I know it's not a novel, but you'll thank me after reading it :)

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There is the Wiz series by Rick Cook. I loved that series. A programmer gets transported to a world of magic and fun ensues.

There is the Otherworld series by Tad Williams. It is about a group of people that get trapped in a VR world.

I also liked Caverns of Socrates by Dennis L. McKiernan.

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I happily second any recommendations of The Hitchhiker's Guide To The Galaxy, Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, Microserfs or JPod.

I also enjoyed Close to the Machine by Ellen Ullman. Not fiction, more of a memoir; entertaining stories and interesting characters.

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"Dreaming In Code" by Scott Rosenberg is an excellent book, although I don't know if it counts for a novel. It's more like a documentary.

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Diaspora by Greg Egan. In fact, just buy all his books and take them with you - they are short enough to read in a single sitting and great to boot!

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Since you're looking for a programming novel, The Adolescence of P1 by Thomas J Ryan has to be on your list. As mentioned, it holds up well--though the first chunk of it is kinda trashy.

Another, better, read is Enigma, by Robert Harris. It's a historical novel about cracking the Nazi codes, Turing, and all that intrigue.

Browse cyberpunk reading lists for other ideas, but they're often not related to programming, per se, but rather electronic fantasy (usually nightmare) worlds. The Matrix is pretty typical of this genre.

Probably the first of these that i--and many others--read was Gibson's Neuromancer, followed by Count Zero, Mona Lisa Overdrive, Burning Chrome, and Johnny Mnemonic.

Other interesting reads include True Names by Vernor Vinge, Blood Music by Greg Bear and most of Bruce Sterling's work.

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Not exactly "the best", but worthy enough for this list.

The Bug (Ellen Ullman)

http://www.amazon.com/Bug-Ellen-Ullman/dp/0385508603

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For your two week break in Spain I'd suggest you read something about Spain. It would do you good to read about the country while you are there.

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I highly recommend The Mezzanine by Nicholson Baker. This is a mesmerizing story about an office worker's one afternoon at work. It's got spellbinding detail, and when you're on vacation, I think it'll make you appreciate your time off even more.

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The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-time ... since it appears a good number of devs and admins display Asperger like personalities.

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Greg Egan — Diaspora. If ever there was a novel about programming reality, this is it.

(Apparently not readily available in paperback, but here's the Amazon linkage)

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There are a whole bunch of books on the subject, but I read this the other day and literally could not put it down... which it pretty damn amazing given the subject matter!

The Difference Engine: Charles Babbage and the Quest to Build the First Computer

http://www.amazon.com/Difference-Engine-Charles-Babbage-Computer/dp/0142001449/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1223176132&sr=1-3

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The Shockwave Rider by John Brunner. Old (1975), but in some ways prescient, view of society dominated by ubiquitous networking and (perhaps overblown - though I'm not sure) effects of too-rapid change.

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The Metamorphosis of Prime Intellect is an odd but fun story of a post singularity dystopia.

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Though dated, (who nowadays uses a Data General???) I loved The Soul of a New Machine by Tracy Kidder.

Alan

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"This Alien Shore" by CS Friedman

"Snow Crash" by Neal Stephensen

Non-Fiction, but an interesting read nevertheless, "The Medical Detectives" by Berton Roueche

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Fire in the Valley is the history of the PC, beginning with the Altair, Jobs and Wozniak forming Apple, Gates and Allen forming Microsoft, and lots of other people and companies who were instrumental in the creation of the industry. It's long but interesting.

The Cuckoo's Egg is also very good.

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Not strictly "programming", but Daemon by Leinad Zeraus is a pretty good read. ...and, of course, anything by William Gibson is usually a good choice.

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I just finished Fox Tales by Kerry Nietz ... fantastic book about a software development company!

Fox Tales

This memoir of Fox Software details the company's growth from a college professor's side project to a 300-employee organization before its acquisition by Microsoft for $160 million in the early 1990s. Recounted are the...

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The Blue Nowhere by Jeffery Deaver, its a fantsastic hacker/ crime thriller which is set in the very early 90's. A fantastic read and a genuinly unique story.

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I just finished The Raw Shark Texts by Steven Hall. It was a really good book which had me reading furiously. I think I have to read it again soon. It is a great tale with lots of twists and quarks.

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If you like spy novels like The Cuckoo's Egg, read both sides of the Kevin Mitnick story with Takedown by Tsutomu Shimomura and John Markoff, and with The Fugitive Game by Jonathan Littman.

Shimomura, a computer security expert that Mitnick allegedly targeted, and Markoff, a New York Times writer, tell the glamorous side of the story of a dangerous criminal mastermind. And Littman, a journalist who knew Mitnick at the time, tells a much different story of the events and raises questions about the motives behind the former book's authors.

Both books are worth checking out if you enjoy computer espionage stories, especially since the stories events that inspired them are true.

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Coding Slave....by Bob Reselman.

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Max Barry writes very funny novels. Not strictly computer related, but "Company" was about being a drone inside a large corporation.

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Personally, I spent my holiday reading no programming books - as much as I love my job, it is a holiday remember! If you want to look at it as a learning experience, allowing yourself to explore other classics (maybe more Kafka than Austen if you like) bends your brain in a different way so you can come back with a different perspective on things. Zen and the Art of Motorcycle maintenance gets kind of close...

... code complete would have taken me over the luggage limit !

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i can't believe that no one has mentioned Jason K Chapman's The Heretic i must be getting old or something

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On another thread, someone recommended The Pillars of the Earth by Ken Follett. I'm now halfway through it and it's pretty good. So far, the advertised similarity of cathedral-building to software-building is only vaguely apparent, but that doesn't stop it being a very enjoyable novel.

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