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         Gibson William:     more books (100)
  1. Zero History by William Gibson, 2011-08-02
  2. Spook Country by William Gibson, 2007-08-07
  3. Pattern Recognition by William Gibson, 2005-02-01
  4. Count Zero by William Gibson, 2006-03-07
  5. Neuromancer by William Gibson, 2004-11-02
  6. All Tomorrow's Parties by William Gibson, 2003-02-04
  7. Virtual Light by William Gibson, 1994-07-01
  8. Mona Lisa Overdrive by William Gibson, 1989-12-01
  9. Idoru by William Gibson, 1997-09-01
  10. A mass for the dead by William Gibson, 1996
  11. Burning Chrome by William Gibson, 2003-07-01
  12. Miracle Worker, The (Acting Edition) by William Gibson, 2010-03-26
  13. The Miracle Worker: A Play by William Gibson, 2008-06-17
  14. The Ware Tetralogy by Rudy Rucker, 2010-06-01

1. William Gibson - Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia
Although he retains dual citizenship, 17 William Gibson has lived in Vancouver, Canada since leaving the US in the 1960s. 4
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gibson
William Gibson
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation search For other persons named William Gibson, see William Gibson (disambiguation) William Gibson
William Gibson in August 2007 Born March 17
Conway, South Carolina
Occupation Novelist Writing period Genres Science fiction Literary movement Cyberpunk Debut works Fragments of a Hologram Rose
(short story, 1977)
Neuromancer
(novel, 1984) Influences Bester Borges Burroughs Cornell ... Stone Influenced Doctorow Morgan Nagata Stephenson ... Stross Website http://WilliamGibsonbooks.com William Ford Gibson (born ) is an American Canadian writer who has been called the "noir prophet" of the cyberpunk subgenre of science fiction In 1982, Gibson coined the term cyberspace and popularized the concept in his debut novel Neuromancer (1984). Gibson is best known for depicting a visualised, worldwide communications network before it became established in the 1990s, and he is credited with anticipating and establishing the conceptual foundations of the Internet and the World Wide Web Having moved around frequently with his family as a child, Gibson grew to be a shy, ungainly teenager who took refuge in reading science fiction. After spending his adolescence at a private boarding school in Arizona, Gibson dodged the draft at the onset of the Vietnam War by emigrating to Canada, where he became immersed in

2. William Gibson - Wikiquote
From Wikiquote. Jump to navigation, search. William Ford Gibson (born 17 March 1948) sciencefiction author. Contents. 1 Sourced
http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/William_Gibson
William Gibson
From Wikiquote
Jump to: navigation search William Ford Gibson (born 17 March science-fiction author
Contents
  • Sourced
    edit Sourced
    • The NET is a waste of time, and that's exactly what's right about it.
      • Name of an article he wrote for New York Times Magazine (14 July 1996) See also: more quotes about the Internet
      edit Neuromancer
      • The sky above the port was the color of television, tuned to a dead channel. The past is past, the future unformed. There is only the moment, and that is where he prefers to be. They damaged his nervous system with a wartime Russian mycotoxin. Strapped to a bed in a Memphis hotel, his talent burning out micron by micron, he hallucinated for thirty hours.The damage was minute, subtle, and utterly effective. For Case, who'd lived for the bodiless exultation of cyberspace, it was the Fall. They'd left the place littered with the abstract white forms of the foam packing units, with crumpled plastic film and hundreds of tiny foam beads. The Ono-Sendai; next year's most expensive Hosaka computer; a Sony monitor; a dozen disks of corporate-grade ice; a Braun coffee maker. "Hey," he'd said, "it's me. Case." The old eyes regarding him out of their dark webs of wrinkled flesh. "Ah," Ratz had said, at last, "the artiste." The bartender shrugged. "I came back." The man shook his massive, stubbled head. "Night City is not a place one returns to, artiste," he said, swabbing the bar in front of Case with a filthy cloth, the pink manipulator whining.

3. PAL: William Gibson
William Gibson is a known dramatist who has written and published poetry, plays, fiction and autobiography. He studied two and one half years at the City
http://web.csustan.edu/english/reuben/pal/chap8/gibson.html
PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide - An Ongoing Project Paul P. Reuben (To send an email, please click on my name above.) Chapter 8: William Gibson (1914- ) Primary Works Selected Bibliography 1980-Present MLA Style Citation of this Web Page A Brief Biography ... Home Page
Source: The Miracle Worker Primary Works The Cobweb The Miracle Worker The Seesaw Log and Two for the Seesaw A Mass for the Dead Grove of Doom American Primitive A Season in Heaven The Body and The Wheel The Butterfingers Angel, Mary and Joseph, Herod the Nut, and The Slaughter of Twelve Hit Carols in a Pear Tree Shakespeare's Game Golda Monday after the Miracle (a sequel to The Miracle Worker), Selected Bibliography 1980-Present MacNicholas, John. Twentieth-Century American Dramatists, Part 1: A-J. Detroit: Gale, 1981. Mandell, Laura, and Michael Eberle-Sinatra. eds. College Park, MD: U of Maryland, 2002. William Gibson : A Brief Biography A Student Project by Sandi Hector William Gibson is a known dramatist who has written and published poetry, plays, fiction and autobiography. He studied two and one half years at the City College of New York from 1930-1932. William Gibson currently lives in Stockbridge, Massachusetts with his wife, Margaret Brenman, who is a psychoanalyst. They have two sons, Thomas and Daniel.

4. William Gibson
William Gibson is an American science fiction author living in Vancouver, Canada. He was born near Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, USA, in 1948.
http://project.cyberpunk.ru/idb/williamgibson.html
Science Fiction
William Gibson
Gibson's view of a very probable downside future was a satirical criticism of current trends. Somehow, it touched a nerve and triggered a cascade of intelligent inquiry and practical experimentation. There's no end of discussion which ranges from literary to practical to psychological about the implications of our new found powers. The fact is that we are building another reality.
Henry W.Targowski
William Gibson is an American science fiction author living in Vancouver, Canada. He was born near Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, USA, in 1948. Gibson is married with Deborah Gibson, and they have 2 children. Gibson has been writing short stories since the 70's, and he had a few vague ideas as early as 1976, the year he wrote his first published story 'Fragments Of A Hologram Rose', which mixes end-of-an-affair melancholy with an early take on virtual reality. But it wasn't quite working, so he gave up and spent 1977 buying punk 45s. Gibson's first novel

5. Books | Futuristic Fantasy Lives Now For Author William Gibson | Seattle Times N
William Gibson dazzled readers in the 1980s by envisioning worlds few could have imagined then; cyberspace, the Internet, virtual reality.
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/books/2003821831_gibson06.html
self.name = "parentSection"; The Seattle Times Company NWjobs NWautos NWhomes ... Low-graphic version RSS feeds
  • Home Local initnav('timesnav'); initnav('marketplacenav'); Advanced search Movies Restaurants Today's events Hi Contact us Monday, August 6, 2007 - Page updated at 02:01 AM E-mail article Print view Share: Digg Newsvine
    Futuristic fantasy lives now for author William Gibson
    By Mary Ann Gwinn Seattle Times book editor Author appearance William Gibson The author of "Spook Country" http://node.tumblr.com/ or www.nodemagazine.com While you're waiting, you can ponder his thoughts on the past, the present and the future, shared in a recent phone interview: Q. In "Spook Country," you write about "locative art" in situ through virtual-reality devices. How much of this technology already exists? A. One of my more technically adroit colleagues pointed out that you can't use GPS indoors (as Bobby does in "Spook Country"). We hadn't quite gone to press. But then he said, if you need to use GPS indoors, you can just triangulate it off the nearest cellphone towers. I spent a busy afternoon updating Bobby's skill set a bit. Whatever relationship I have with the technology ... it is not in understanding how it works. I think what it is is seeing the forest for the trees. I don't know how it works, but what I watch is how people react with it. Which is generally not what the manufacturer had in mind. Q. This novel seems to be about turning virtual reality outward. Have you found other examples of that?

6. William Gibson | The A.V. Club
The author of Neuromancer and the new Spook Country talks about how he inspired current technologies, but the world still isn t what he expected it would
http://www.avclub.com/content/interview/william_gibson
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Interviews
William Gibson
  • Email
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Interviewed by Noel Murray August 22nd, 2007 From the moment in 1984 when William Gibson's first novel, Neuromancer The A.V. Club about growing up in Virginia, becoming renowned as a science-fiction seer, and the process of writing his latest novel, Spook Country The A.V. Club: People often point to your early books as being prophetic regarding the coming technology, but do you think it's possible that the technicians read your books and then tried to make them a reality? William Gibson: Oh, absolutely. I know it to be the case, to some minor extent. There was a time in the late '80s, early '90s, when every government in the world decided to have a huge, lavishly funded virtual-reality conference, and I got invited to all of them. So I met lots and lots of the players in the goggles-and-gloves school of virtual reality. None of them actually became the man who invented television, which is what I think all of them expected to become. But to a man or woman, they all allowed as how I had really helped them out. They had this idea, but they'd never been able to explain to anybody what it was. Once they had

7. William Gibson
William Gibson is often referred to as the father of cyberpunk, a science fiction subgenre that he created with his seminal work, Neuromancer, in 1984.
http://contemporarylit.about.com/cs/authors/p/gibson.htm
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Contemporary Literature
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    William Gibson
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  • From William Gibson:
    "Google me and you can learn that I do it all on a manual typewriter, something that hasn't been true since 1985, but which makes such an easy hook for a lazy journalist that I expect to be reading it for the rest of my life. I only used a typewriter because that was what everyone used in 1977, and it was manual because that was what I happened to have been able to get, for free. I did avoid the Internet, but only until the advent of the Web turned it into such a magnificent opportunity to waste time that I could no longer resist. Today I probably spend as much time there as I do anywhere, although the really peculiar thing about me, demographically, is that I probably watch less than twelve hours of television in a given year, and have watched that little since age fifteen.

    8. William Gibson – Wikipedia
    William Ford Gibson (s. 17. maaliskuuta 1948 Conwayssa EteläCarolinassa) on yhdysvaltalainen, nykyisin Kanadassa asuva tieteiskirjailija, joka tunnetaan
    http://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gibson
    William Gibson
    Wikipedia
    Loikkaa: valikkoon hakuun T¤m¤ artikkeli k¤sittelee scifi-kirjailijaa. Samannimisest¤ n¤ytelm¤kirjailijasta katso William Gibson William Gibson William Ford Gibson (s. 17. maaliskuuta Conwayssa Etel¤-Carolinassa ) on yhdysvaltalainen , nykyisin Kanadassa asuva tieteiskirjailija , joka tunnetaan erityisesti cyberpunk -klassikko Neurovelhon ) kirjoittajana. Gibson keksi 1982 termin kyberavaruus ja otti sen k¤ytt¶¶n esikoisromaanissaan Neurovelho
    muokkaa Suomennetut teokset
    • Neurovelho ( Neuromancer Kreivi Nolla ( Count Zero Mona Lisa ( Mona Lisa Overdrive Virtuaalivalo ( Virtual Light Hahmontunnistus ( Pattern Recognition
    muokkaa Aiheesta muualla

    T¤m¤ kirjailijasta kertova artikkeli on tynk¤ . Voit auttaa Wikipediaa laajentamalla artikkelia Haettu osoitteesta http://fi.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gibson Luokat Yhdysvaltalaiset tieteiskirjailijat Kirjailijatyng¤t N¤kym¤t Henkil¶kohtaiset ty¶kalut Valikko Haku Ty¶kalut Muilla kielill¤

    9. William Gibson - Wikipedia
    Translate this page Tra il 1984 e il 1988, vedono la luce le tre opere che daranno successo a William Gibson. Si tratta della già citata Trilogia dello Sprawl ,
    http://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gibson
    William Gibson
    Da Wikipedia, l'enciclopedia libera.
    Vai a: Navigazione cerca William Gibson William Ford Gibson Conway 17 marzo ) ¨ uno scrittore statunitense , noto soprattutto come autore fantascientifico e considerato il padre del filone cyberpunk . Oggi vive in Canada
    Indice
    • Biografia Le opere Bibliografia
      modifica Biografia
      Nasce il 17 marzo 1948 a Conway, nel Sud Carolina USA ). Suo padre era un benestante imprenditore che aveva fatto successo installando impianti igienici ad Oak Ridge , l'installazione militare dove fu creata la prima bomba atomica . Il giovane William studi² in un collegio di Tucson Arizona , dove venne a contatto con la mentalit  hippy , rimanendone affascinato. Espulso dal collegio per aver fatto uso di marijuana , rientra a casa (la famiglia si era trasferita in Virginia ), entrando in contrasto coi familiari, che disapprovavano il suo stile di vita. All'et  di diciannove anni si trasferisce in Canada , per evitare l'arruolamento per il Vietnam . Nel si laurea in Letteratura Inglese a Vancouver , prima di partire per l' Europa , dove vive viaggiando per un anno, grazie ad una piccola rendita data dalle propriet  che gli avevano dato i suoi genitori che gli consentiva, come disse lui stesso, "di fare la fame confortevolmente". Rientra a Vancouver, dove vive ancor oggi, per consentire alla moglie di completare gli studi universitari.

    10. Globeandmail.com: William Gibson
    William Gibson s first novel, Neuromancer, is among the most influential science fiction novels ever written. His new novel, Spook Country,
    http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/RTGAM.20070530.wlum-gibson0531/BNSt
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    William Gibson
    Pining for Toronto's 'gone world'
    WILLIAM GIBSON Globe and Mail Update May 31, 2007 at 12:15 AM EST To commemorate the fest, we commissioned 10 best-selling authors to write for Globe readers. Vancouver's William Gibson launches the series. A friend of mine in New York has been pointing out surviving bits of what he calls his city's "gone world" to me for the past 20 years or so. When I first started getting to know New York, in the early 1980s, it consisted mostly of that gone world, or so it seemed to me. People who lived there didn't seem to believe it possible that this would change. My friend was the first New Yorker I knew who noticed that things there were changing, becoming gone. The sewing machine spare-parts quarter, for instance (gone), or the tenement that once housed McGurk's Suicide Hall (gone). Bits and pieces of SoHo and TriBeCa and Chelsea, all gone. Had I not had so observant a guide, I certainly would have missed them, these glimpses of vanishing things, but my friend had treasured them all, and was pained by their going, and took care to show them to me. It was his conviction that they were invariably replaced by much less interesting things (to put it mildly), and I generally agreed.

    11. William Gibson
    William Gibson s birthdate, birth name, Tarot card, Rune, and Numerology!
    http://www.facade.com/celebrity/William_Gibson/
    William Gibson
    Birth Name: William Ford Gibson Birthdate:
    Today's Biorhythm

    Today's Runes

    Today's I Ching

    Today's Stichomancy
    ...
    Search Google

    Tarot Card
    (Equivalent of "3/17/1948") The Hierophant
    : Faith in tradition and the old school. A justified and ancient source of power. Being supportive, sympathetic and loyal. Receiving instructions, learning, guidance or inspiration. The ability to hear a higher or inner voice. May also indicate a religious ritual, such as a marriage or an initiation.
    Rune
    (Equivalent of "William Ford Gibson") Ehwaz Birth Mates
    (Equivalents of "3/17/1948")
    Albert Einstein Ben Affleck Bill O'Reilly Bruce Willis ... William Randolph Hearst Public Role (Equivalents of "William Gibson") Words that embody your presence are "Numerology, Psychology, Sensuality". Words that embody things that may be a part of you are "Bridge, Cinema, Cool, Harem, Leader, Miami, Needle, Parade, Zen". Words that embody people or things in your periphery are "Ambush, Anonymity, Attention, Body, Bosom, Boss, Cabal, Chaos, Chosen, Cloud, Compliance, Crimson, Darkness, Dictionary, Emissary, Excitement, Exhaustion, Flute, Focus, Future, Gangster, Girl, Grass, Guide, Hacker, Heaven, Hero, Jewel, Labyrinth, Liberty, Madman, Mercy, Mirror, Movie, Octopus, Opera, Overlord, Parliament, Phoenix, Poor, Prey, Prison, Psychedelic, Radiance, Relief, Satisfaction, Savage, Scorpion, Shame, Sky, Song, Spirit, Struggle, Succubus, Supply, Suspense, Syzygy, Tattoo, Theory, Usurper, Video, Warlord, Warm".

    12. William Gibson -- Britannica Online Encyclopedia
    Britannica online encyclopedia article on William Gibson American writer of science fiction who was the leader of the genre s cyberpunk movement.
    http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9104300/William-Gibson
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    William Gibson American author in full William Ford Gibson
    Main
    born March 17, 1948, Conway, South Carolina, U.S. American writer of science fiction movement. Johnny Mnemonic (1981; filmed 1995) and Burning Chrome (1982), were published in Omni magazine. With the publication of his first novel, Neuromancer cybernetic cyberspace Neuromancer, Count Zero (1986) was set in the same world as Neuromancer but seven years later. The characters of Mona Lisa Overdrive Bruce Sterling on The Difference Engine (1990), a story set in Victorian England, Gibson returned to the subject of cyberspace in Virtual Light (1993). His Idoru (1996), set in 21st-century Tokyo, focuses on the media and virtual celebrities of the future. (1999) concerns a clairvoyant cyberpunk who labours to keep a villain from dominating the world. William Gibson Link to this article and share the full text with the readers of your Web site or blog-post.
    If you think a reference to this article on "William Gibson" will enhance your Web site, blog-post, or any other web-content, then feel free to link to this article, and your readers will gain full access to the full article, even if they do not subscribe to our service.

    13. William Gibson - Official Website
    www.williamgibsonbooks.com/ 9k - william GibsonBlog Archives -, January 2003, February 2003, March 2003, April 2003, May 2003, June 2003, July 2003, August 2003, September 2003, October 2004
    http://www.williamgibsonbooks.com/
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    14. William Gibson
    Bohemian Ink s overview of the cyberpunk phenomenon and william gibson s fiction. Related links.
    http://www.levity.com/corduroy/gibson.htm
    William Gibson when hiro hit the switch, i was dreaming of paris, dreaming of wet, dark streets in winter. the pain came oscillating up from the floor of my skull, exploding behind my eyes in a wall of blue neon; - William Gibson Hinterlands
    William Gibson is called "the father of Cyberpunk" by some, and is trashed as a poser by others. But one thing is clear. His book Neuromancer (1984), which won the Hugo, Nebula, and Philip K. Dick Awards that year, was the Christ-child of cyberpunk, whose road to superstardom was paved by the John the Baptist figures of Samuel Delaney, Roger Zelanzy, Philip K. Dick, and James Triptree, Jr. The books that followed in the "Sprawl" trilogy; Count Zero and Mona Lisa Overdrive , created the seminal canon of cyberpunk that has inspired both a new generation of cyberpunk authors as well as cheap, stale cyberpunk knock-offs. So whether you are of the opinon that Gibson is a genius or a poser, there is no denying that he changed the direction of Science Fiction in the last decade. And not only is Gibson a trendsetter in fiction, he has also spoken out on many technological issues that face society today, including the use of the Internet for educational purposes. But on the flip side, he is adamant about abstaining from use of the Internet himself. He has said "I'm not a techie. I don't know how these things work. But I like what they do, and the new human processes that they generate." And in a sense, we are living Gibson's cyberpunk here and now, and it is not hard to imagine that is what our future will be like. He has denied that, however, saying, "People shouldn't look at science fiction like they look at "real" fiction. They shouldn't expect that this is what the future is going to look like. [Science fiction authors] are sort of charlatans; we come up with a few ideas and we make a living off of that."

    15. William Gibson: The Rolling Stone 40th Anniversary Interview : Rolling Stone
    You made your name as a sciencefiction writer, but in your last two novels you ve moved squarely
    http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/17227831/william_gibson_the_rolling_s
    Advertisement Printer Friendly URL: http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/story/17227831/william_gibson_the_rolling_stone_40th_anniversary_interview Rollingstone.com Back to William Gibson: The Rolling Stone 40th Anniversary Interview
    William Gibson: The Rolling Stone 40th Anniversary Interview
    Andrew Leonard Posted Nov 07, 2007 8:45 AM Advertisement
    You made your name as a science-fiction writer, but in your last two novels you've moved squarely into the present. Have you lost interest in the future? It has to do with the nature of the present. If one had gone to talk to a publisher in 1977 with a scenario for a science-fiction novel that was in effect the scenario for the year 2007, nobody would buy anything like it. It's too complex, with too many huge sci-fi tropes: global warming; the lethal, sexually transmitted immune-system disease; the United States, attacked by crazy terrorists, invading the wrong country. Any one of these would have been more than adequate for a science-fiction novel. But if you suggested doing them all and presenting that as an imaginary future, they'd not only show you the door, they'd probably call security. What are the major challenges we face?

    16. Patrick Ernzer's William Gibson Page
    In his first two novels, Neuromancer and Count Zero, william gibson established himself as the most original and admired new voice in science fiction for
    http://www.unix-ag.uni-kl.de/~pcfe/Html/gibson.html
    William Gibson
    "Wiliam Gibson is the Hugo and Nebula award-winning author of the Cyberspace trilogy: Neuromancer Count Zero , and Mona Lisa Overdrive , and is the co-author (with Bruce Sterling) of The Difference Engine. Gibson's widely acclaimed short stories are collected in Burning Chrome . He lives in Vancouver, British Columbia, with his family."
    dixit About the Author in Virtual Light
    Neuromancer
    The 1st of the Cyberspace trilogy. Case was burnt-out, useless, suicidal - his nervous system grievously maimed by a wartime Russian mycotoxin. The top Japanese experts in nerve-splicing and microbionics had taken his money and left him crippled. His days as a software cowboy seemed over.
    Then Case met a man who could cure him. In return, Case had to do a job. Had to. Because bonded to his artery walls were tiny sacs of the mycotoxin. Tiny sacs, slowly melting...
    dixit back-cover of the 1989 Grafton edition (ISBN 0-586-06645-4)
    Count Zero
    When the Angels pulled Count Zero out of the martix there wasn't much left of him. The centipede did a good job on his face though - and now Two-a-Day was going to let him in on the really big stuff...
    Turner woke up in a new body with a beautiful woman beside him. They let him recuperate for a while in Mexico, then Hosaka reactivated his memory for the most dangerous mission of all: to make Mitchell defect Maas Biolabs...

    17. William Gibson Bibliography / Mediagraphy
    Complete william gibson bibliography; not just the books, but his articles, short stories, audio books, and related media.
    http://www.skierpage.com/gibson/biblio.htm
    William Gibson Bibliography / Mediagraphy
    Just the facts, but far more complete than the other Johnny-come-lately "6 books and out" lists out there. All lists are in real-world chronological order. The chronology of the "Sprawl" series is Johnny Mnemonic short story - New Rose Hotel short story - Burning Chrome short story - Neuromancer - Count Zero - Mona Lisa Overdrive. Other stories in Burning Chrome fit more or less tightly into the imagined future of the series. By the time Gibson wrote the Skinner's Room short story - virtual light - Idoru - All Tomorrow's Parties sequence set closer in time, the near future had turned out different from the "Sprawl" future. There's a fascinating cyberpunk timeline at http://www.subsitu.com/cns/tl.htm that dovetails Gibson's work with the cyber, punk, and sf goings-on at the same time.
    Summary:
    Books
    • Burning Chrome Neuromancer Count Zero Mona Lisa Overdrive The Difference Engine(with Bruce Sterling) Virtual Light Idoru All Tomorrow's Parties Pattern Recognition
    Short stories and articles
    • the stories collected in Burning Chrome The Gernsback Continuum and Red Star, Winter Orbit

    18. William Gibson Aleph - Essential Information Collection
    william gibson aleph This page contains william gibson novel and movie info, biography, mediagraphy, images, downloads, glossaries, summaries
    http://www.antonraubenweiss.com/gibson/
    William Gibson aleph
    SPRAWL SERIES BRIDGE TRILOGY OTHER WORKS MOVIES / FILM ... RELATED / EXTRAS
    *REQUEST: Please don't email me until after you have read the About... page and FAQ
    C O N T A C T I N G G I B S O N
    For information on how to contact Mr Gibson, read the Contact page. Welcome to William Gibson aleph , the essential information collection about contemporary writer William Gibson. In Gibson's novel 'Mona Lisa Overdrive', an aleph is a big chip which can store a huge amount of information. The intention of William Gibson aleph is to collect all available information on William Gibson and his work. For comments, suggestions, and questions write to Manuel Derra
    N E W S Recent news...
    09.08.07 The new novel Spook Country
    06.02.07 Gibson revealed in a blog entry the cover of the upcoming novel Spook Country
    28.11.06 New page on Spook Country
    13.12.05 I found two old zombie versions of my site on previous web hosts (at Angelfire and, even older, at

    19. William Gibson (II)
    Writer Johnny Mnemonic. Visit IMDb for Photos, Filmography, Discussions, Bio, News, Awards, Agent, Fan Sites.
    http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0317218/
    Now Playing Movie/TV News My Movies DVD New Releases ... search All Titles TV Episodes My Movies Names Companies Keywords Characters Quotes Bios Plots more tips SHOP WILLIAM... DVD VHS CD Not the ... IMDb William Gibson Quicklinks categorized by type by year by ratings by votes by TV series titles for sale by genre by keyword power search credited with biography other works publicity contact message board official sites miscellaneous Top Links biography by votes awards news articles ... message board Filmographies categorized by type by year by ratings ... tv schedule Biographical biography other works publicity contact ... message board External Links official sites miscellaneous photographs sound clips ... video clips
    William Gibson (II)
    advertisement photos board add contact details Photos Add photo(s) and resume with IMDb Resume Services
    Overview
    Date of Birth: 17 March Conway, South Carolina, USA more Trivia: Coined the phrase "cyberspace" in his novel "Neuromancer". more
    Filmography
    Jump to filmography as: Writer Actor Thanks Self Writer: Pattern Recognition announced (novel) Neuromancer pre-production (novel)
    ... aka The X-Files (USA)
    First Person Shooter
    TV episode (writer)
    Kill Switch
    TV episode (writer) New Rose Hotel (1998) (short story) Johnny Mnemonic (1995) (screenplay) (short story)
    ... aka Fugitivo del futuro (USA: Spanish title: TV title)
    Johnny Mnemonic: The Interactive Action Movie
    Tomorrow Calling (1993) (TV) (short story The Gernsback Continuum) Neuromancer Actor:

  • Episode #1.14
  • 20. An Interview With William Gibson (by Dan Josefsson)
    Author william gibson on nonfunctioning American democracy, the importance of giving computers to the poor, and the elitist appeal of the Internet.
    http://josefsson.net/gibson/
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    "I DON'T EVEN HAVE A MODEM"
    Author William Gibson on non-functioning American democracy, the importance of giving computers to the poor, and the elitist appeal of the Internet
    On November 23, 1994 William Gibson came to Stockholm, Sweden, to promote his new book "Virtual Light". I interviewed him for "Rapport", Sweden's largest TV-news program. We talked for about half an hour, but only a small percent of the interview made it to the TV audience. William Gibson deserves better than that, so I hereby realese a transcript of the entire interview on the Web. Enjoy!
    By Dan Josefsson
    Listen to William Gibson's definition of "Cyberspace". Reasonable sound quality (361 k) Lousy quality, but quick (272 k) ... Next page Feedback is welcome! Mail me at
    This William Gibson WebRing site
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