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WE'RE IN SPOOK COUNTRY

quote:
“I guess that’s what all writers aspire to, being a genre unto themselves. Like Elmore Leonard—he wrote westerns, thrillers, just about everything. Readers would seek out his writing for an Elmore Leonard experience. Maybe that’s what’s happening—like Leonard, I’m becoming a brand.”
Evolving as brand name “Gibson” in the grey zone in between genre writing and literary fiction seems liberating. Freed from the stylistic strictures of both genres ensures a wide swathe for Gibson’s stylistic quirkiness.

Whereas there are plenty of tamer writers who claim Joycean influences, Gibson (who has not) seems sometimes as if his project is actually to update modernist literary strategies for a 21st-century audience. Sometimes phrases just grate in the ear. The reader finds herself frantically paging backwards to reread. Chapters begin with ambiguous pronoun references. The joy of reading starts to resemble the Protestant work ethic.

Like the best of modernists, Gibson defends his sometimes challenging style. “I’m not just doing it to be difficult. I wouldn’t do it if I didn’t think that there was something to be gained from it.”

Believing that the essence of any book resides not in the realm of authorial intention, but squarely in the reader’s own mind, Gibson says that he always ensures a path for the committed reader to appreciate his writing.
“I just think that somehow it makes for a better experience.” One that is certainly unique to Gibson’s writing.

Yeah, I totally agree with that assessment.


If evolution is outlawed, only outlaws will evolve.
 
Posts: 424 | Location: Socorro, New Mexico | Registered: October 04, 2006Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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quote:
Whereas there are plenty of tamer writers who claim Joycean influences, Gibson (who has not) seems sometimes as if his project is actually to update modernist literary strategies for a 21st-century audience. Sometimes phrases just grate in the ear. The reader finds herself frantically paging backwards to reread. Chapters begin with ambiguous pronoun references. The joy of reading starts to resemble the Protestant work ethic.


I think WG is one of a kind. He transcends genres and labels (in the sense that his fiction cannot be labeled either as "SciFi" in the works pre-PR or any other ordinary classification pos-PR). He effectively leaves other famed (and some infamous Smile ) authors talking alone while he is creating something absolutely new.

In the 80ies he was able to see problems (including technical ones) that we are facing just now. And he was not naive as other authors that decided to "write about the future". Then, in PR and now in SC he captures the subtle social changes that are making the XXI century so different from the previous one.

Besides content, WG has style: he writes extremely well. In fact, he is addictive: if you don't want to get a dependency, then you'd better not reading anything he writes. If you start reading one of his books, you'll have to read all and ask for more.

I think a little problem is that he seems to be a little narcissist. But then, it is all about his private life and, anyways, he doesn't lack elegance (even under attacks of less talented people). And an author must be under the spotlights.

I am finishing SC and wondering what will come next. Just hopping that I won't have to wait much...


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Why oh why didn't I take the blue pill ???
 
Posts: 718 | Location: Brazil | Registered: June 13, 2007Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Narcissists tend to be very defensive and not modest. I don't think I've ever seen WG in defensive mode. Usually, very open and humble, I'd say.


 
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Absolutely psyclone. Very open, very humble.


If evolution is outlawed, only outlaws will evolve.
 
Posts: 424 | Location: Socorro, New Mexico | Registered: October 04, 2006Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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If I may make a guess at what cbarreto meant by "narcissist," I think it was something like, WG only writes about things that interest him personally, for his own weird reasons. He doesn't go out of his way to try and appeal to anyone else.* Which is fine and doesn't have the bad connotations of narcissism.

* Actually, I don't agree with that statement. I think WG tries hard to appeal, in that he works hard to make a novel such that the reader will want to read it. However, I also think he knows that the best writing is about things that the author, personally, is interested in rather than something he thinks his readers might be interested in.


________
A child wounded in body and spirit.
An iguana driven mad by pain.
A woman fighting to save them both
and the man who is their only hope...
 
Posts: 11649 | Location: Silicon Valley (not Japan) | Registered: May 28, 2003Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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Colin,

quote:
I think it was something like, WG only writes about things that interest him personally, for his own weird reasons


You got it right.

quote:
I think WG tries hard to appeal, in that he works hard to make a novel such that the reader will want to read it.


I don't think so. He appeals because he is extremely good in what he does: he has the right ideas, in the right time and express them mostly in the right places to the right people. He knows how to tell his stories and besides that writes well.


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Why oh why didn't I take the blue pill ???
 
Posts: 718 | Location: Brazil | Registered: June 13, 2007Edit or Delete MessageReport This Post
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I think he very consciouly grafts a plot onto his ideas to engage the reader. the ideas are wholly his own musings and I feel that he thinks the plot must be there as a courtesy to the audience.
 
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