Neon Leviathan

Reading Level
Grade 7
Time to Read
6 hrs 53 mins

Reading Level

What is the reading level of Neon Leviathan?

Analysing the books in the series, we estimate that the reading level of Neon Leviathan is 6th and 7th grade.

Expert Readability Tests for
Neon Leviathan

Readability Test Reading Level
Flesch Kincaid Scale Grade 4
SMOG Index Grade 7
Coleman Liau Index Grade 7
Dale Chall Readability Score Grade 6

Reading Time

6 hrs 53 mins

How long to read Neon Leviathan?

The estimated word count of Neon Leviathan is 103,230 words.

A person reading at the average speed of 250 words/min, will finish the book in 6 hrs 53 mins. At a slower speed of 150 words/min, they will finish it in 11 hrs 29 mins. At a faster speed of 450 words/min, they will finish it in 3 hrs 50 mins.

Neon Leviathan - 103,230 words
Reading Speed Time to Read
Slow 150 words/min 11 hrs 29 mins
Average 250 words/min 6 hrs 53 mins
Fast 450 words/min 3 hrs 50 mins
Neon Leviathan by T.R. Napper
Authors
T.R. Napper

More about Neon Leviathan

103,230 words

Word Count

for Neon Leviathan

358 pages

Pages
Hardcover: 358 pages
Paperback: 358 pages

11 hours and 6 minutes

Audiobook length


Description

A collection of stories about the outsiders – the criminals, the soldiers, the addicts, the mathematicians, the gamblers and the cage fighters, the refugees and the rebels. From the battlefield to alternate realities to the mean streets of the dark city, we walk in the shoes of those who struggle to survive in a neon-saturated, tech-noir future. Twelve hard-edged stories from the dark, often violent, sometimes strange heart of cyberpunk, this collection – as with all the best science fiction – is an exploration of who were are now. In the tradition of Dashiell Hammett, Philip K Dick, and David Mitchell, Neon Leviathan is a remarkable debut collection from a breakout new author."Haunting and iridescent—combines the paranoid weirdness of the best Philip K Dick, the chilly but cool-as-fuck future gleam of cyberpunk, and an achingly beautiful literary inflection reminiscent of mainstream heavyweights like Murakami or Ishiguro. T. R. Napper’s futures feel at once gritty and vertiginous and close-focus human in the way only the best SF can manage. Whatever roadmap he’s working from, I can’t wait to see where he’s taking us next.” Richard Morgan, author of Altered Carbon “It is easier to write about violence than to write about the aftermath—the grief, the guilt, the long-held trauma. It’s easier to write about the shouted argument than the taut silence which follows it. It’s easier to write about dreamlike unreality than it is to invest a reader in the mundane and the everyday. And yet the stories within Neon Leviathan balance all these competing demands with a deft and masterful hand.” Adrian Tchaikovsky, author of Children of Time “Heartbreaking… it evokes the depth of Chinese history, the successive wars, the poetry that expresses both the love of the landscape and the pain of the soldier leaving home, perhaps never to return.” (for Dark on a Darkling Earth) Lois Tilton, Locus Magazine “T. R. Napper’s cyberpunk story is a standout [in the collection], featuring a download with the tension of a high-speed chase” (for Twelve Minutes to Vinh Quang) Publisher’s Weekly “The story is by turns blackly funny, speculatively impressive, and bleakly moving.” (for A Strange Loop) Rich Horton, Locus Magazine “Wonderfully strange” (for An Advanced Guide to Successful Price-Fixing in Extra-Terrestrial Betting Markets) Sci Fi Review “Darkly gonzoid” (for An Advanced Guide to Successful Price-Fixing in Extra-Terrestrial Betting Markets) Lois Tilton, Locus Magazine “Thrilling and Moving” (for Ghosts of a Neon God) Rocket Stack Rank “The whole reads like a fever dream” (for Great Buddhist Monk Beat Down) Tangent Online