Much later, I have listened to his latest two books, The Peripheral and Agency many times (with teenage daughter), and love them as they are more actual sci-fi. That said, his previous trilogy (Pattern Recognition, Spook Country, and Zero History) are our favorite of his now, though they are barely what most would consider sci-fi. All his books are really capers and weave in his unique, poignant, and heart-oriented perspectives on our modern world.
It is worth noting that his collection of non-fiction articles, Distrust that Particular Flavor, is thought-provoking and simply wonderful.
There’s a less well know cyberpunk adjacent TV show, Continuum, that’s set in Vancouver, year 2077 and all that :) It’s surprisingly good!
I still imagine a halo device from that show that i think would do well to be made, I imagine a garmin/iwatch that also completes lifestyle and healthcare needs on steroids that also replaces smart phones
I think the apple watch is somewhat halo like! Especially if they manage to add blood pressure and continuous glucose monitoring. Though hopefully with less panopticon/police state vibes.
> "Case, the hapless protagonist, stumbles between crises, barely knowing what’s going on, at risk from a femme fatale and being made offers he cannot refuse from mysterious Mr. Bigs.” Again, you don’t read William Gibson for the plot.
I think this misses one of the most striking aspects of the novel, that Gibson was talking about the singularity and the possibility, or inevitability, of AI. The glossy cool and limited character arcs were in service of a broader statement about society and culture. Gibson was making statements about class difference and what kind of effect the rapid change of technology had on society.
It's like saying the "The Wire"'s characters are two dimensional because they get buffeted by a system that's deeply flawed. The point is that the system is effectively a character in it's own right.
The article notably also doesn't mention Borges, who I believe is a very strong influence to Gibson (though maybe not for Neuromancer?) [0].
[0] https://www.bbc.com/culture/article/20140902-the-20th-centur...