Neal Stephenson follows his international bestseller, the WWII thriller 'Cryptonomicon', with a novel set in the 16th and 17th centuries, as he tells the stories of Daniel Waterhouse and Enoch Root, the ancestors of his central characters in the previous book, following them from their childhoods in London, to education at Cambridge amidst the political and religious fervour and tensions of the Reformation, through the English Civil War, and travels as far as afield as Poland and the American colonies.
With a cast of characters that includes Newton, Leibniz, Christopher Wren, Charles II, Cromwell and the young Benjamin Franklin, Stephenson again shows his extraordinary ability to get inside a place and time; as he did for the futures of his science fiction ('Snowcrash', 'The Diamond Age') and for WWII ('Cryptonomicon'), here he does for the England of the Civil War and the Europe of the Wars of Religion and the scientific Revolution.
'Quicksilver' is yet another tour-de-force from a writer who is simply unique.