Neuromancer
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Nov 01, 2012 01:15AM
One of the most important works of the 20th century for the 21st century. Masterwork.
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Does it say anything beyond its radical stylistic world view with well written prose? It points to a future where contracts are predominant and corporations rule the world through greed. It laid a roadmap for those growing of age in the 80's for how to survive theyse giants that would come in the late 90's and which still stalk the world today.
It speaks of a world that we live in and everything that followed in the genre refined that vision.


I don't think that this is a literary masterwork in terms of prose; I wasn't particularly moved by the writing style.
BUT - I give all praise to the incredible ideas and concepts that were put forth in this book. Especially (but not only) given the time it was published, the amount of groundwork that was laid for modern science fiction narratives is jaw-dropping, in my opinion.

"The sky was the color of television tuned to a dead channel..." is the brilliant metaphor that begins the novel, and continues to resonate throughout.
Those who critique Gibson's style ought to reflect upon the significant portion of the genre that is clearly stylistically inferior to Gibson.


I've been a spectator to the literary/hard sci fi debate for decades, and I know it when I smell it :)

It only looks style-heavy because SF too often lacks style.
I definitely got the impression Neuromancer is superficial though. It's not that the book lacks substance. There's a fairly detailed social vision in there, not to mention the geeky stuff. Rather, the nature of substance is at issue.
Someone aptly compared the setting to Blade Runner. I found Neuromancer to be about as serious as a good Hollywood flick. Critically-acclaimed SF novels used to have have more depth (Do Androids Dream is a case in point).
Neuromancer is convoluted and sometimes obscure. But that's not depth. What's between the lines, waiting to be illuminated? Maybe I just didn't get the point of Neuromancer (yes, I read the sequels as well as Burning Chrome).
While Neuromancer isn't trying to be hard SF, it's still harder than most SF.
Contrasting "literary" SF with hard SF misses the point of hard SF. The label gets thrown around will-nilly. It's not supposed to mean trite SF or technological porn.

Possible spoilers: a first book, Neuromancer leaves very little on the table for other, later, writers. You might recall the at the end, AI "finds" another AI--answering the question "are we alone."
Might recall as well that Case sees his analogue attending his old girlfriend, as a companion, in cyberspace, suggesting all the possibilities later exploited byCharles Stross and Ian Banks .re AI and the ability of consciousness to live within it.
W. Gibson "style"--literary/lyrical/poetic is incredibly difficult to do, or more people would do it.
The flatness of the characters a kind of statement in and of itself: most people are "flat," not particularly wise or self-aware, under extreme pressure of a corporate state, perhaps even more so.
Still read through Sprawl series every year or two, and am completely amazed at what Gibson accomplished.
Very much agree with Outis and others Neuromancer has
"style as well as substance."
Gibson pretty much spoiled most other sci-fi for me.

Contrasting "literary" SF with hard SF misses the point of hard SF. The label gets thrown around will-nilly. It's not supposed to mean trite SF or technological porn."
No, not all hard sf is "tech porn" but technology, science and on the page discussion of the science involved is pretty central to the concept. Stanislaw Lem is a guy who I think manages to be literary and still write "hard sci fi" for what's it worth...
At any rate, my point was more that the style over substance criticism of Gibson is one that I've seen mostly from those who like their sci fi "hard". They tend to think that not going into the science is cheating. For them it's an essential characteristic in world building in a sci fi novel. I reckon there's more than one way to skin that particular cat.


I have read Neuromancer at least ten times. It's like a favorite DVD - it puts me in another world. I can feel and taste it (almost)!

potent social critique
OR
all style and no substance?
Go!"
That seems a bit polarized. I mean, why does it have to be one extreme or the other? But I get the point, it's all inspiring debate, so here's what I thought. On the one hand, I thought it was a testament to Gibson's early style as a techno-punk noire thriller. But at the same time, it had some valid social commentary to make. One can immediately see the gulf between rich and poor in this world, the social effects of technology, and how it has effected people differently on either side of the wealth divide.
I'd say it's in this trilogy that Gibson's biggest observations, about the transformative power of wealth and the struggle of everyone else simply to make ends meet, achieved its clearest expression. That, and his constant set ups involving freelancers doing work for mysterious corporate forces are things he could back to again and again. But it was definitely in this and the sequels which followed that it was most artful and fun to read.


When I finished NEUROMANCER I thought I had found my new Go-To Guy for my Sci-Fi fix. I headed straight out to talk to my dealer (the local used bookstore). I bought three or four other Gibson books. I particularly wanted to read THE DIFFERENCE ENGINE: the idea of an alternate history where Charles Babbage's mechanical computer actually worked. Ashamed to admit that Gibson's other novels didn't really work for me. I did greatly enjoy some of his short stories. Gibson's novels, I'd get about a third of the way in, then think, "Why am I reading this? This isn't any fun." Perhaps I should try reading William Gibson again.
In my flawed opinion, William Gibson did a huge number of things right in NEUROMANCER for 1984. Awesome style; awesome substance. The novel still works for me, although his way of putting words together makes me have to work to read his text and fall into his novel. Even his first sentence, that kicks the ass of the first sentences of 99.99999% of all other novels out there, I want to pull out the comma. I think it would hit harder and blaze into your brain better without it. That's just me. @hg47

Yes, Gibson heaps on the style, but I wouldn't say it's lacking in substance. There's the themes of technology-induced dehumanisation, the fragmentation of social relationships, the play off between corporate/state power and the empowerment of atomised sub-cultural groups constantly in flux to challenge these traditional power bases, but all -- courtesy of the tech -- ultimately playing to the corporates/state turf.
I think these themes have resonance today, we might not 'jack in' the way Case does, but just look at everyone glued to their 'decks' (phones/tablets/PCs etc) and the rows that rage over Internet freedom versus regulation. Actually one of the things that I am finding fascinating about re-reading the book is the combination of dated aspects with those that remain very resonant with today's digital revolution.

You kind of got to read it with the expectations a young man has written it and not an older man.

The Two Faces of Tomorrow by James P. Hogan and
Shockwave Rider by John Brunner are better



Hey, Sebas!
Your evaluation of William Gibson & NEUROMANCER made me laugh: you and I were both initially thrilled by Gibson, then ultimately disappointed, although for different reasons. Oh, well. You might enjoy STEEL BEACH by John Varley. Cheers! @hg47



I come across too many books that are described as having fantastic characters but that actually just have cliched, idealistic characters that are altogether too perfect (or evil) and so too easy to like (or hate) and so the reader, who naturally likes (or hates) them, considers them to be 'good' characterisations. Gibson's two main characters in Neuromancer - Case and Molly (ignoring Wintermute) - are neither cliched nor idealistic but they are believable.

In fact, the writing was so awkward in that so-called novel that I felt like I had just bought a pre-teen's fanfic.


Good point, Troy. I already posted a nearly actual thought about NEUROMANCER a bit further back: January 6, 2013. Cheers! @hg47



I happened to read the 20th anniversary ed. and found it interesting in W.Gibson's introduction, the thing he was most displeased with while looking back at his work, was not seeing a future with cell phones in it, lol. I guess you can't predict everything.

I would certainly list this in the style over substance column. At the time, perhaps so much substance wasn't expected, but today it is, at least from me.
I read partway through the book, and couldn't bare to continue, but I liked the ideas, I just felt like I was reading nonsense half the time, and it was distracting. I decided to keep going, I mean everyone can't be wrong, right? Well be the end I wasn't rewarded. Love the idea's, respect the vision it took, but as an actual read, like something I have to read to get through, it was laborious, and not enjoyable.
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