Affiliates
| Works by
William Gibson (Writer)
[March 17, 1948 - ] |
Spook Country
(2007)
Tito is in his early twenties. Born in Cuba, he
speaks fluent Russian, lives in one room in a NoLita warehouse, and does
delicate jobs involving information transfer.
Hollis Henry is an investigative journalist, on assignment from a
magazine called Node. Node doesn't exist yet, which is fine; she's used
to that. But it seems to be actively blocking the kind of buzz that
magazines normally cultivate before they start up. Really actively
blocking it. It's odd, even a little scary, if Hollis lets herself think
about it much. Which she doesn't; she can't afford to.
Milgrim is a junkie. A high-end junkie, hooked on prescription
antianxiety drugs. Milgrim figures he wouldn't survive twenty-four hours
if Brown, the mystery man who saved him from a misunderstanding with his
dealer, ever stopped supplying those little bubble packs. What exactly
Brown is up to Milgrim can't say, but it seems to be military in nature.
At least, Milgrim's very nuanced Russian would seem to be a big part of
it, as would breaking into locked rooms.
Bobby Chombo is a "producer," and an enigma. In his day job, Bobby is a
troubleshooter for manufacturers of military navigation equipment. He
refuses to sleep in the same place twice. He meets no one. Hollis Henry
has been told to find him.
Spook Country is the perfect follow-up to Pattern Recognition,
which was called by The Washington Post (among many glowing reviews),
"One of the first authentic and vital novels of the twenty-first
century."
Pattern Recognition (2003)
Cayce Pollard is an expensive, spookily intuitive market-research
consultant. In London on a job, she is offered a secret assignment: to
investigate some intriguing snippets of video that have been appearing
on the Internet. An entire subculture of people is obsessed with these
bits of footage, and anybody who can create that kind of brand loyalty
would be a gold mine for Cayce's client. But when her borrowed apartment
is burgled and her computer hacked, she realizes there's more to this
project than she had expected.
Still, Cayce is her father's daughter, and the danger makes her
stubborn. Win Pollard, ex-security expert, probably ex-CIA, took a taxi
in the direction of the World Trade Center on September 11 one year ago,
and is presumed dead. Win taught Cayce a bit about the way agents work.
She is still numb at his loss, and, as much for him as for any other
reason, she refuses to give up this newly weird job, which will take her
to Tokyo and on to Russia. With help and betrayal from equally unlikely
quarters, Cayce will follow the trail of the mysterious film to its
source, and in the process will learn something about her father's life
and death.
All Tomorrow's Parties (1999)
William Gibson, who predicted the
Internet with Neuromancer, takes us into the millennium with a brilliant
new novel about the moments in history when futures are born.
All Tomorrow's Parties is the perfect novel to publish at the end
of the 20th century. It brings back Colin Laney, one of the most popular
characters from Idoru, the man whose special sensitivities about people
and events let him predict certain aspects of the future. Laney has
realized that the disruptions everyone expected to happen at the
beginning of the year 2000, which in fact did not happen, are still to
come. Though down-and-out in Tokyo, his sense of what is to come tells
him that the big event, whatever it is, will happen in San Francisco. He
decides to head back to the United States--to San Francisco--to meet the
future.Idoru (1996)
The author of the ground-breaking
science-fiction novels Neuromancer and Virtual Light returns with a
fast-paced, high-density, cyber-punk thriller. As prophetic as it is
exciting, Idoru takes us to 21st century Tokyo where both the promises of
technology and the disasters of cyber-industrialism stand in stark
contrast, where the haves and the have-nots find themselves walled apart,
and where information and fame are the most valuable and dangerous
currencies.
When Rez, the lead singer for the rock band Lo/Rez is rumored to be
engaged to an "idoru" or "idol singer"--an artificial celebrity creation
of information software agents--14-year-old Chia Pet McKenzie is sent by
the band's fan club to Tokyo to uncover the facts. At the same time, Colin
Laney, a data specialist for Slitscan television, uncovers and publicizes
a network scandal. He flees to Tokyo to escape the network's wrath. As
Chia struggles to find the truth, Colin struggles to preserve it, in a
futuristic society so media-saturated that only computers hold the hope
for imagination, hope and spirituality.
Johnny Mnemonic/the Screenplay and the Story 1995) "Johnny Mnemonic is based on a story published in Gibson's collection of short fiction, Burning Chrome Fans will have the opportunity to see Gibson's imagination morph from short story to screenplay. In this special trade edition, which includes both the screenplay for the film, starring Keanu Reeves, and the original short story, Gibson fans will be allowed a rare glimpse at the evolution of the creative process." Amazon Neuromancer (1994)
Here is the novel that started it all, launching the
cyberpunk generation, and the first novel to win the holy trinity of
science fiction: the Hugo Award, the Nebula Award and the Philip K. Dick
Award. With Neuromancer, William Gibson introduced the world to
cyberspace--and science fiction has never been the same.
Case was the hottest computer cowboy cruising the information
superhighway--jacking his consciousness into cyberspace, soaring through
tactile lattices of data and logic, rustling encoded secrets for anyone
with the money to buy his skills. Then he double-crossed the wrong people,
who caught up with him in a big way--and burned the talent out of his
brain, micron by micron. Banished from cyberspace, trapped in the meat of
his physical body, Case courted death in the high-tech underworld. Until a
shadowy conspiracy offered him a second chance--and a cure--for a
price....
Virtual Light (1993) The Difference Engine (1991) with Bruce Sterling
Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988)
Count Zero (1986)
Turner, corporate mercenary, wakes in a
reconstructed body, a beautiful woman by his side. Then Hosaka Corporation
reactivates him for a mission more dangerous than the one he's recovering
from: Maas-Neotek's chief of R&D is defecting. Turner is the one assigned
to get him out intact, along with the biochip he's perfected. But this
proves to be of supreme interest to certain other parties--some of whom
aren't remotely human.
Bobby Newmark is entirely human: a rustbelt data-hustler totally
unprepared for what comes his way when the defection triggers war in
cyberspace. With voodoo on the Net and a price on his head, Newmark thinks
he's only trying to get out alive. A stylish, streetsmart, frighteningly
probable parable of the future and sequel to Neuromancer.
Burning Chrome (1986)
The Seesaw Log: A Chronicle of the Stage Production, With the Text, of Two for the Seesaw (1984)
Monday After the Miracle: A Play in Three Acts (1983)
A Cry of Players: A Play (1969)
The Miracle Worker: A Play for Television (1957) Buy movie with Parry Duke, Anne Bancroft Video, DVD
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