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Stephenson:Neal:Quicksilver:17:...Oh Dear...(Alan Sinder)

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a page on Literary techniques

Stephensonia

Young Ben Franklin's defense of Doctor Waterhouse earns an unvoiced Oh Dear! from an omniscient-ish narrator from the Enoch Root and Daniel Waterhouse bits in the “present” of 1713. “The King of the Vagabonds” reads like a picaresque novel. And the Eliza bits read like a classic epistolary novel but spiced up a notch with hidden ciphers, encodings or technical tricks we've no access to. Cryptonomicon displayed Neal's grasp of Len Deighton's thriller skills, and the Baroque Cycle's Quicksilver and The Confusion may do the same for George MacDonald Fraser.

Authored entries

Wikipedia: Literary Technique

Literary technique, also called literary device. Novels and short stories do not simply come from nowhere. Usually the author employs some general literary technique as a framework for artistic work.

Annotated List of Literary Techniques

Authors also manipulate the language of their works to create a desired response from the reader. This is the realm of the rhetorical devices.