BURNING CHROME AND OTHER STORIESby WILLIAM GIBSON Published by Harper Collins ISBN 0-00-648043-8 £5.99
Gibson's style has been described as "a combination of low-life and high-tech". This collection shows how perceptive he can be in observing both. Gibson doesn't just use technology as a back-drop or to provide props; he considers the effects that developments in technology might have upon individuals and societies. In Johnny Mnemonic for example a character explains:-- "We're an information economy. They teach you that at school. What they don't tell you is that it's impossible to move, to live, to operate at any level without leaving traces, bits, seemingly meaningless fragments of personal information. Fragments that can be retrieved, amplified." Gibson describes also the detail of low-life settings. In this collection there are very good descriptions of different types of bars in The Belonging Kind. He paints portraits of different characters, Deke in Dogfight, Lese in The Winter Market, with different colours and shades. Ultimately, however, he extrapolates from a mass (or media)
consciousness of the present. Gibson has interesting things to say
but he is not a prophet. The future will not be the same as his
stories. The Soviet Union has not dominated space research (as in
Red Star, Winter Orbit), in fact it no longer exists. Many
future developments will derive not from mass actions or popular
consciousness, but from the work of "outsiders". Instead of
looking just at what is now considered "central", perhaps he should view
what is emerging at the edge....
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