“I’m surprised Gibson is seen as a highly masculine writer, given the focus on fashion and the consistently romantic plots. Yes, there’s hot RAM (the fact that people are trading RAM in megabytes in the “future” is one of very few details that date the novel), a military outfit called Screaming Fist and simstim consoles. But there’s also the uber-cool razorgirl Molly, kicking ass in her “cherry red cowboy boots”. Gibson’s prose style is in the tradition of Chekhov, Carver, Chandler, Burroughs and Hemingway. Lots of verbs, lots of nouns – things – as opposed to feelings, over-explanation and exposition. Before I began writing The End of Mr Y, I put three books on my desk as lucky charms, and this was one of them. My novel isn’t cyberpunk, but I wanted my readers to feel something of what I felt when I first read Neuromancer.”
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One of my favourite writers, Scarlett Thomas, on Gibson’s Neuromancer, which I really need to read, given my love of Pattern Recognition, Spook Country and Zero History.
From the Guardian: The stars of modern SF pick the best science fiction