Describe Books As Virtual Light (Bridge #1)
Original Title: | Virtual Light |
ISBN: | 0140157727 (ISBN13: 9780140157727) |
Edition Language: | English |
Series: | Bridge #1 |
Literary Awards: | Hugo Award Nominee for Best Novel (1994), Locus Award Nominee for Best Science Fiction Novel (1994), Prix Aurora Award for Best Long Form Work in English (1995) |
William Gibson
Paperback | Pages: 304 pages Rating: 3.85 | 21231 Users | 529 Reviews

Declare About Books Virtual Light (Bridge #1)
Title | : | Virtual Light (Bridge #1) |
Author | : | William Gibson |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Anniversary Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 304 pages |
Published | : | October 26th 1996 by Penguin Books Ltd (first published September 1993) |
Categories | : | Science Fiction. Cyberpunk. Fiction |
Commentary Toward Books Virtual Light (Bridge #1)
William Gibson begins his Bridge trilogy with this 1993 publication that was nominated for both the Hugo and the Locus awards.In the air of great protagonist names won hands down by Neal Stephenson in his 1992 cyberpunkapalooza Snow Crash with Hiro Protagonist, Gibson introduces us to Chevette Washington, a messenger living on the Bay Bridge between San Francisco and Oakland who gets caught up in corporate espionage surrounding some stolen glasses.
But these are not just any glasses, they produce virtual light, enabling the viewer to see more than reality, and this is not just the Bay Bridge, this is Gibson’s world building after devastating earthquakes and after tumultuous socioeconomic and political upheavals.
Taking off from his archetypal Sprawl series, Gibson gives us another foray into a near future cyberpunk landscape that mesmerizes as it entertains. While this lacks the fringe element edgy cool of Neuromancer, this is told more straightforward and has some early indications of the kind of writing Gibson would do with his Blue Ant series. SF readers who could not buy into the Sprawl books may find this one more approachable.
Lots of fun and highly recommended.

Rating About Books Virtual Light (Bridge #1)
Ratings: 3.85 From 21231 Users | 529 ReviewsNotice About Books Virtual Light (Bridge #1)
Great book!I will be recording a podcast episode on this here shortly, which will be available here, The Nerd Book Review but a quick and dirty review. I read SnowCrash before this novel and really enjoyed it. After reading this though my rating for SnowCrash has gone down a bit. This novel does dystopian the right way. The world feels so dirty and unfair. A girl makes a poor decision and steals something from the wrong people. That decision leads to a series of actions with an ending that isGreat sociological science fiction with a cool vibe and, in my opinion, a vast improvement over Gibson's previous Sprawl trilogy. Some scary observations on 90's culture and crackling prose with a cool kind of dialogue for Gibson's characters. A brilliant piece of cyberpunk literature.

William Gibson begins his Bridge trilogy with this 1993 publication that was nominated for both the Hugo and the Locus awards.In the air of great protagonist names won hands down by Neal Stephenson in his 1992 cyberpunkapalooza Snow Crash with Hiro Protagonist, Gibson introduces us to Chevette Washington, a messenger living on the Bay Bridge between San Francisco and Oakland who gets caught up in corporate espionage surrounding some stolen glasses.But these are not just any glasses, they produce
William Gibson begins his Bridge trilogy with this 1993 publication that was nominated for both the Hugo and the Locus awards.In the air of great protagonist names won hands down by Neal Stephenson in his 1992 cyberpunkapalooza Snow Crash with Hiro Protagonist, Gibson introduces us to Chevette Washington, a messenger living on the Bay Bridge between San Francisco and Oakland who gets caught up in corporate espionage surrounding some stolen glasses.But these are not just any glasses, they produce
If Haruki Murakami and Philip K Dick had ever written a book together this would have been it (they didn't have no baby or anything though). To me it felt like Philip's story but in the voice of Murakami. My first William Gibson novel and I've enjoyed it, he has created an interesting future, things are only slightly more advanced than they are now which makes it easier to get into. There are a fair number of characters, all having little bit parts, I only really had an issue with one of then,
As a teenager, I remember I loved William Gibson. I loved Neuromancer. Now, after reading this book, I'm no longer sure. His writing skills are sound, but just couldn't get interested in a story about some lost VR glasses. I think that Gibson spent too much time creating a world for this story, in this very short book, that he left out what would make it an interesting story. Eh, that's okay. A friend told me that Neuromancer was the only decent thing he wrote anyway.
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