Literary Buffistas 3: Don't Parse the Blurb, Dear.
There's more to life than watching Buffy the Vampire Slayer! No. Really, there is! Honestly! Here's a place for Buffistas to come and discuss what it is they're reading, their favorite authors and poets. "Geez. Crack a book sometime."
More easily readable than Cryptonomicon (and without the random tangents on things such as breakfast cereal)
But those are the best parts!
Neuromancer left almost no impression on me.
The weird thing about it is that it's really hard to figure out any of the characters' motivations. Things just sort of happen, and you go along with it. And then it ends.
The weird thing about it is that it's really hard to figure out any of the characters' motivations. Things just sort of happen, and you go along with it. And then it ends.
Yep, that's Gibson.
I have a total crush on Gibson, but he possibly should have been a poet rather than a novelist. If his writing was typeset more like
The Wasteland
I think his word/imagery genius would come through, and his offscreen denouments would be less puzzling.
However, the "little people" protagonists getting rolled like rocks in a river is a very Cyberpunk motif.
Stephenson. I love
Snow Crash
and like
Cryptonomicon
and occasionally quote-ref bits of
Quicksilver
(only from the first 3000 pages or so, since I gave up halfway through and haven't read the others). However, I'm not sure he's "cyberpunk." He's only managed the "-punk" part in
Zodiac
(which wasn't "cyber-") and
Snow Crash.
Otherwise he's techi-fic. And disturbingly focused on teenage girls.
I will say, after 12 years of working for the gov't, that he nailed that experience spot-on in
Snow Crash.
books you could life with one hand.
er...should have been "books you could lift" up there, obviously.
I'm the only person I know of with ovaries who doesn't love The Diamond Age. I was so bored reading it it took me three tries to get through the whole thing. I'm a Snow Crash girl all the way.
And I haven't reread any Gibson in far too long. Must fix that.
I'm the only person I know of with ovaries who doesn't love The Diamond Age.
raises hand
I found ANOTHER box of books I need to get rid of. And of course while all the "get rid of" books were out on tables and such, the DH went through and pulled back several he'd previously let go of. We just can't tolerate being parted from books.
At this point, what I want is a cave, where I can pile all the books up and lair on them, and savage anyone who tries to take them.
I was "meh" on The Diamond Age but am an unabashed Gibson fangurl. Neuromancer left deep impressions on me. I prefer his short stories but I like where he's been going with his more recent novels.
I love Gibson and always have. But Stephenson is Da Man, in my opinion.
Though I, too, was "meh" on The Diamond Age.
The rest of his stuff, though...
Snow Crash
and especially
Cryptonomicon
...loved. LOVED. Read
Quicksilver
, but have yet to read the rest of the Baroque Cycle.
What I love about Stephenson is that he sort of assumes you know of the tech and then will tell you how it works. Gibson, I seem to recall, admitted he knew jack about computers when he wrote
Neuromancer
but, as was mentioned previously, was far more interested in technology's effect on society and people.
Stephenson's characters have more depth in my opinion, while Gibson's weirder explorations are more compelling in a different way.
I like Sterling a lot as an editor, but I don't enjoy his writing.
I think that's Sterling I'm thinking of.
Neuromancer
was a revelation to me, but it started to seem like Gibson was continuing to write in that universe because that's what people expected.
Pattern Recognition
was thoroughly awesome abd made me love him again.
Snow Crash
seemed like something really new and different when it came out, but The
Baroque Cycle
has overshadowed all other Stephenson for me.
Gibson, I seem to recall, admitted he knew jack about computers when he wrote Neuromancer but, as was mentioned previously, was far more interested in technology's effect on society and people.
Yeah -- he had a blog entry a while back (while he was writing Spook County IIRC) about how people often write him asking exactly what some bit of tech in his novels is supposed to look like, and how a fair amount of the time, he really has no idea. Just because his characters are in many cases partially defined by their implants doesn't mean he has any clue what they look like or how they're supposed to "work."
I like that about Gibson. Sometimes it's the time for OCD projections of current tech. And sometimes it's so concept-based you not only can't call foul, but just have to sit back and enjoy the conceptual ride.