The Confusion
The Confusion consists of two books: Bonanza and Juncto.
In the year 1689, a cabal of Barbary galley slaves – including one Jack Shaftoe, aka King of the Vagabonds, aka Half-Cocked Jack – devises a daring plan to win freedom and fortune. A great adventure ensues - a perilous race for an enormous prize of silver... nay, gold... nay, legendary gold.
In Europe, the exquisite and resourceful Eliza, Countess de la Zeur, is stripped of her immense personal fortune by France's most dashing privateer. Penniless and at risk from those who desire either her or her head (or both), she is caught up in a web of international intrigue, even as she desperately seeks the return of her most precious possession.
Meanwhile, Newton and Leibniz continue to propound their grand theories as their infamous rivalry intensifies, stubborn alchemy does battle with the natural sciences, dastardly plots are set in motion... and Daniel Waterhouse seeks passage to the Massachusetts colony in hopes of escaping the madness into which his world has descended.
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Neal Stephenson
In a literary landscape filled with genre walls and boundaries, Neal Stephenson has spent his entire career walking straight through them—sometimes with a sword, sometimes with a quantum computer, often with both. Whether he's dissecting cryptography during World War II or reimagining the architecture of a metaverse long before Silicon Valley caught up, his fiction doesn’t just explore the future, it interrogates the systems that shape it.
Born in Fort Meade, Maryland, and raised in a family steeped in science and engineering, Stephenson was surrounded early on by the kind of analytical thinking that would later permeate his fiction. He studied physics and geography at Boston University, a dual interest that seems almost inevitable in hindsight—his novels often chart the intersections of space, time, history, and human ambition with the precision of a scientist and the curiosity of a historian.
The Baroque Cycle
The Baroque Cycle consists of three books. The current recommended reading order for the series is provided below.

