Cyberpunk discussion
Cyberpunk Itself
>
Neuromancer discussion
date
newest »

message 1:
by
JuliAnna
(new)
Dec 01, 2008 11:22AM

reply
|
flag


I find the SF&F book club too... pedestrian for my tastes. I can't get along with people who like books like "His Highnesse, Thee Dragonne", and "Up to My Lips In Elves!" as much as SF.

Neuromancer was a "first of a kind" and quite wondrous at the time. In retrospect, here is where I am with Gibson:
Neuromacer - 3.5*
Count Zero - 2*
Mona Lisa Overdrive - 4*
Burning Chrome - 4*
Virtual Light - 3.5*
Idoru - 3*
All Tomorrows Parties - 2*
Pattern Recognition - 3*
Spook Country - 3*
Gibson might not be my favorite author, nor did he give me any 5* material. However, without him, we would still be reading Wizards and Star Fleet Captains wearing gold braided uniforms.
As a frame of reference, Neal Asher puts out 4* and 5* books. The Skinner is a 5*+++ book. Altered Carbon by Richard Morgan is a 5*+++ book.

Neuromacer - 4*
Count Zero - 3*
Mona Lisa Overdrive - 3*
Burning Chrome - 4.5 (mostly on the strength of two stories)*
Virtual Light - 3.5*
Idoru - 4*
All Tomorrows Parties - 2*
Pattern Recognition - 1*
Spook Country - 2*
And I dunno if I agree about what would have been coming out of the presses without Gibson, John Shirley's Eclipse volume 1 came out in 1985, his City Come a Walkin' came out in 1980, a full four years before Neuromancer, Rudy Rucker's Software came out in 1982 and I don't think there IS a cyberpunkier novel than that.
Also Pat Cadigan and Bruce Sterling were already writing, though I think it can easily be said without them Neal Stephenson woulda had nothing.