I'm happy to report that the second volume in The Baroque Cycle trilogy 
wasn't just a wavy line connecting the beginning and the end of the 
story arc. In fact Stephenson "con-fused" two books together to make up 
this middle volume. If I remember correctly the first volume was made up
 of three books so The Confusion is made up of books 4 and 5. Contrast 
this technique to that of The Two Towers for example which follows on 
the end of the The Fellowship of the Ring by following some members of 
the fellowship for an entire book before we ever get to find out the 
fate of the other members of the fellowship in the second half (book 
four) of that volume. Not so in this case. More or less instant 
gratification! no lines, no waiting
Stephenson has woven a complex tale that continues to span years, even 
decades, dogging the varied and often crossing paths of this enormous 
cast of characters as they move even further afield. This volume truly 
spans the early world; at a time when circumnavigating the world was 
still a new, rare thing.
This installment brings us some answers to questions raised in the first
 volume. Always a preference to endless teasing in a trilogy. But it 
also makes new connections and raises new questions, so has me looking 
forward to the last volume, which I've just taken out from my library.
Stephenson knows what a reader needs and moves the storyline forward at a
 steady rate. The beginnings of the first volume seemed slow but with a 
story this epic, it's like an ocean tanker, it takes a while to get it 
going. This is a fun take on historical fiction, and has some of that snarky inserting of modern slang into the mouths of Enlightenment Era characters. But it doesn't seem like Stephenson uses this technique to ignore the history, it feels like he's done the research and there are strong bones holding up this epic farce.
And Baroque indeed! Festoon away, my depilated penman!
