Science Fiction Aficionados discussion

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Neuromancer
Monthly Read: Random
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November Random Read--Neuromancer
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Mark
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Nov 13, 2011 06:53AM

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Back to Neuromancer. Maybe I'm just not smart enough to understand all the understood action in Gibson's prose, but it was gripping and difficult all at the same time.

I'm so afraid to read Fantasy now. A Fantasy is a guaranteed ~1,000 pages. And when it's unsatisfying, it's a major waste of time. Like, I can read 3 Neuromancers during that space of time!

I'm so afraid to read Fantasy now. A Fantasy is a guaranteed ~1,000 pages. And when it's unsatisfying, it's a major waste of time. Like, I can read 3 Neurom..."
If you avoid authors like Martin, Jordan, and Goodkind, you can get shorter fantasy. I just started The Last Unicorn and it's under 300 pages.
I've read mostly fantasy and am fairly new to science fiction so I try to switch back and forth between the genres to keep things fresh. After Unicorn, I may start some Phillip K. Dick novels.


Aloha, I just finished the first two thirds of the The Steel Remains series. BEST FANTASY EVER! This completes my consumption of the Richard K. Morgan canon to date, and he's thoroughly cemented himself as my favorite contemporary author.
We now return back to Neuromancer...

point taken, Aloha!
your summation of Neuromancer's narrative and the who-does-what-to-whom-and-why was excellent.
your summation of Neuromancer's narrative and the who-does-what-to-whom-and-why was excellent.

GRRM + 1000 pages = Fantasy reading heaven.
Back to Neuromancer - let's just say I'm glad it was a short book!


mark wrote: "point taken, Aloha!
your summation of Neuromancer's narrative and the who-does-what-to-whom-and-why was excellent."



Speaking of a novel's length it is impressive that while Neuromancer is relatively short, it seems bigger, and there's a lot going on. It does force reader to read slower which is hard for me to do at times, lol.
An as for fantasy, lol, I still feel bad for Robert Jordan fans who read every long novel of the Wheel of Times series without getting the final novel. :P

Fortunately, Brandon Sanderson will be completing the WoT series, having already completed books 12 & 13.

I agree that Gibson purposely presented the plot that way. After all, perception via cyberspace is innovative at that time, so it would be what he imagined it would be, throwing in all the hot words, as in holographic projections, etc. He also came from the generation where LSD was a prominent "mind-expanding" drug. I think a person who grew up with the internet and distance fron the 60's influence would have written the book differently. I would say a person of the current internet generation would have written the book coldly and less philosophically. There is something wonderful about writing of authors of the 60 - 70's generation with their metaphysical and philosophical musings. They manage to make everything seem magical.
Oscar wrote: "I also had trouble understanding some of the goings in the novel, which is partly a result of my being slow, lol, but I think that Gibson is playing with perception on purpose and leaving some subt..."


if The Last Unicorn proves too uplifting, let me recommend to you Rampant, which apparently features fearsome killer unicorns.


Is IQ84 any good? I keep running into that book!

This has happened to me a few times. I read a book that will leave little to no impression on me. A couple years down the line, I'll come back and decide to read it again, and I'm blown away. I blame my moody reading habits.
Does anyone else have this problem?



oh i loved Hunger Games, and it really stuck with me. still has. but then i am an emotionally immature kind of guy, so it figures.


i have read both and - although i had issues with them, similar to Neuromancer - i thought they were worth reading.


On another note, I tend to side with a lot of people here that I didn't get into the novel as much as I thought I would. I mean, I like the imagery, and the ideas, and general plot, but I think it was Gibson's writing style that didn't quite really gel with me. It seemed kinda, I don't know, choppy and not fluid enough.
As for Hunger Games, lol, I have been tempted to take a look at those books. I have become a bit more interested in YA books lately. It's a mixed bag because while some YA books are really creative and are universal in the sense that most of us can identify with these books because we remember what it was like to be that age, but some YA leave me cold and I simply can't get into them because of my age. And there is a distinction, I think, between YA lit and books that just happen to be about adolescents.

I think I experienced similar problems, Oscar!
Hunger Games - read it and enjoyed it enough to say I'll be reading the follow ups at some point.
Know what you mean about some YA books and identification, it can be hit and miss sometimes.
Ever tried Patrick Ness' Chaos Walking books? Definitely of the 'hit' variety! :-)

yeah, i wonder that too. i'm curious if hollywood will go the Battle Royale route and keep all the graphic kid violence, or if they'll somehow soften it.


One of my professors said that writers like Gibson and some older scifi writers tend to write with paint strokes, while more recent writers, for example, Neal Stephenson draw everything out. That metaphor is something that stood out and I think it works. For better or worse, and a lot of recent scifi writers, are detailed oriented and that does make it easier to follow along. Gibson's style is more like paint stokes, that is, broader with more implied than detailed. And that's probably why, lol, the novel wasn't as long as many contemporary scifi writers.
Books mentioned in this topic
1Q84 (other topics)Rampant (other topics)
1Q84 (other topics)
The Steel Remains (other topics)
The Last Unicorn (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Richard K. Morgan (other topics)Jim Thompson (other topics)
K.W. Jeter (other topics)