D <
[email protected]> writes:
Finished re-reading William Gibsons Sprawl Trilogy and this is the
judgment:
Neuromancer: 5/5
Count Zero: 4/5
Mona Lisa Overdrive: 3/5
[snip]
I've read some of Gibsons later works, and some of it is ok, but not
even close to the grittiness and darkness of the originals. So
caveat emptor, you computer oriented "punk" readers, stick with the
old stuff.
The Sprawl books are just fine by me.
My songs are of time and distance. The sadness is in you. There
is only the dance.... These things you treasure are shells.
-- William Gibson, _Count Zero_
I love that.
But I think Gibson really got onto the turf he wanted to explore with
the Blue Ant series.
I felt that I was trying to describe an unthinkable present and
I actually feel that science fiction's best use today is the
exploration of contemporary reality rather than any attempt to
predict where we are going. The best thing you can do with
science today is use it to explore the present. Earth is the
alien planet now. -- William Gibson, 1997
Just so. But then this:
It used to be, Gibson had told me, that a defensive membrane
divided his life from his work. He could consider the future as
a professional, without picturing his own life, his kids'
lives. "I never wanted to be the guy thinking about 'Mad Max'
world,' he said. "I had some sort of defense in
place. . . . It's denial, some kind of denial. But denial can
be a lifesaving thing, in certain lives, in certain times. How
on earth did you get through that? Some reliable part of you
just says, It's not happening." The membrane, he went on,
"which I very, very much miss, actually held until the morning
after Trump's election. And I woke up and it was gone, whatever
it was. It was just gone, and it's never come back."
-- William Gibson & Joshua Rothman, Ney Yorker, Dec. 2019
The Jackpot series is some kind of reversion to the Sprawl reference
frame but without some critical element or essence or spark -- too
much a 'Mad Max' world with cyberpunk trim.
I miss the view through the membrane.
--
Mike Spencer Nova Scotia, Canada
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)