Spook Country
 

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by William Gibson

Now that the present has caught up with William Gibson's vision of the future, which made him the most influential science fiction writer of the past quarter century, he has started writing about a time--our time--in which everyday life feels like science fiction. With his previous novel, Pattern Recognition, the challenge of writing about the present-day world drove him to create perhaps his... (read more)

Top tags: science fictionfictioncyberpunkwilliam gibsonnear future (all tags)

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Most Helpful Reviews

Liked It

1 of 1 members found this review helpful.
emilysk
  • Rated 5 stars

I don't care if it's trite to like William Gibson these days, or if all the cool kids are annoyed that he's not writing "Neuromancer" knockoffs anymore... I enjoyed this book almost as much as I liked "Pattern Recognition" and that is saying something. I really especially liked the concept of locative art and I'm waiting for it to become a widespread concept like any day now.

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Didn’t Like It

2 of 2 members found this review helpful.
Andy in Tokyo
  • Rated 2 stars

Unbelievably pretentious characters and mind-numbing, ponderous plot. Highly recommended.

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Community:
  • Rated 3.591623 stars
Amazon:
  • Rated 0 stars
 

Newest Comments

  • ericroku

    ericroku said:

    I found the beginning really slow, but that last 2/3rds of the book were extremely interesting and flew by. The only problem I has was that the ending was abrupt and seemed as if it it was intentionally left open, possibly for a followup? It was a bit disappointing..

    posted Thursday, February 7 2008
  • feralstrumpet

    feralstrumpet said:

    I have read all of Gibson's SF, as well as Pattern Recognition, and every book has amazed me save this one. I found it hard to finish, and the incessant branding of everything was distracting and felt fetishistic and habitual in the writing rather than subversive and knowing like in Pattern Recognition.

    I was most intrigued by Milgrim's story which seemed to me more like a short story stretched out over the course of the novel. The moments of narration closest to him when he is on Rize are the most transcendant parts of the book.

    But on the whole I found that I didn't really care about what was going on. I wanted to be seduced by something-- be it a plot or an idea or a place and I was just left cold by it all.

    posted Monday, October 15 2007
  • djmikey

    djmikey said:

    damn fine read was totally satisfied. gibson never lets me down.

    posted Sunday, September 9 2007
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