"After reading "Neuromancer" for the first time," literary
scholar Larry McCaffery wrote, "I knew I had seen the future of
science fiction] (and maybe of literature in general), and its name
was William Gibson." McCaffery was right. Gibson's 1984 debut is
one of the most celebrated SF novels of the last half century, and
in a career spanning more than three decades, the American Canadian
science fiction writer and reluctant futurist responsible for
introducing "cyberspace" into the lexicon has published nine other
novels.
Editor Patrick A. Smith draws the twenty-three interviews in
this collection from a variety of media and sources--print and
online journals and fanzines, academic journals, newspapers, blogs,
and podcasts. Myriad topics include Gibson's childhood in the
American South and his early adulthood in Canada, with travel in
Europe; his chafing against the traditional SF mold, the origins of
"cyberspace," and the unintended consequences (for both the author
and society) of changing the way we think about technology; the
writing process and the reader's role in a new kind of fiction.
Gibson (b. 1948) takes on branding and fashion, celebrity culture,
social networking, the post-9/11 world, future uses of technology,
and the isolation and alienation engendered by new ways of solving
old problems. The conversations also provide overviews of his
novels, short fiction, and nonfiction.
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