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Spook Country [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

William Gibson
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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 384 Seiten
  • Verlag: Putnam Adult (7. August 2007)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0399154302
  • ISBN-13: 978-0399154300
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 23,1 x 16 x 4,1 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 3.6 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (7 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 124.141 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)

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William Gibson
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Produktbeschreibungen

Amazon.com

Now that the present has caught up with William Gibson's vision of the future, which made him the most influential science fiction writer of the past quarter century, he has started writing about a time--our time--in which everyday life feels like science fiction. With his previous novel, Pattern Recognition, the challenge of writing about the present-day world drove him to create perhaps his best novel yet, and in Spook Country he remains at the top of his game. It's a stripped-down thriller that reads like the best DeLillo (or the best Gibson), with the lives of a half-dozen evocative characters connected by a tightly converging plot and by the general senses of unease and wonder in our networked, post-9/11 time.

Across the Border to Spook Country

For the last few decades, William Gibson, who grew up in Virginia and elsewhere in the United States, has lived in Vancouver, British Columbia, just across the border from Amazon.com's Seattle headquarters, which made for a short drive for a lunchtime interview before the release of Spook Country. We met just a few miles from where the storylines of the new novel, in a rare scene set in Gibson's own city, converge. You can read the full transcript of the interview, in which we discussed, among other things, writing in the age of Google, visiting the Second Life virtual world, the possibilities of science fiction in an age of rapid change, and his original proposal for Spook Country, which we have available for viewing on our site. Here are a few excerpts from the interview:

Amazon.com: Could you start by telling us a little bit about the scenario of the new book?

William Gibson: It's a book in which shadowy and mysterious characters are using New York's smallest crime family, a sort of boutique operation of smugglers and so-called illegal facilitators, to get something into North America. And you have to hang around to the end of the book to find out what they're doing. So I guess it's a caper novel in that regard.

Amazon.com: The line on your last book, Pattern Recognition was that the present had caught up with William Gibson's future. So many of the things you imagined have come true that in a way it seems like we're all living in science fiction now. Is that the way you felt when you came to write that book, that the real world had caught up with your ideas?

Gibson: Well, I thought that writing about the world today as I perceive it would probably be more challenging, in the real sense of science fiction, than continuing just to make things up. And I found that to absolutely be the case. If I'm going to write fiction set in an imaginary future now, I'm going to need a yardstick that gives me some accurate sense of how weird things are now. 'Cause I'm going to have to go beyond that. And I think over the course of these last two books--I don't think I'm done yet--I've been getting a yardstick together. But I don't know if I'll be able to do it again. I don't know if I'll be able to make up an imaginary future in the same way. In the '80s and '90s--as strange as it may seem to say this--we had such luxury of stability. Things weren't changing quite so quickly in the '80s and '90s. And when things are changing too quickly, as one of the characters in Pattern Recognition says, you don't have any place to stand from which to imagine a very elaborate future.

Amazon.com: Now that you're writing about the present, do you consider yourself a science fiction writer these days? Because the marketplace still does.

Gibson: I never really believed in the separation. But science fiction is definitely where I'm from. Science fiction is my native literary culture. It's what I started reading, and I think the thing that actually makes me a bit different than some of the science fiction writers I've met who are my own age is that I discovered Edgar Rice Burroughs and William Burroughs in the same week. And I started reading Beat poets a year later, and got that in the mix. That really changed the direction. But it seems like such an old-fashioned way of looking at things. And it's better not to be pinned down. It's a matter of where you're allowed to park. If you can park in the science fiction bookstore, that's good. If you can park in the other bookstore, that's really good. If people come and buy it at Amazon, that's really good.

I'm sure I must have readers from 20 years ago who are just despairing of the absence of cyberstuff, or girls with bionic fingernails. But that just the way it is. All of that stuff reads so differently now. I think nothing dates more quickly than science fiction. Nothing dates more quickly than an imaginary future. It's acquiring a patina of quaintness even before you've got it in the envelope to send to the publisher.

Amazon.com: So do you think that's your own career path, that you're less interested in imagining a future, or do you think that the world is changing?

Gibson: I think it's actually both. Until fairly recently, I had assumed that it was me, me being drawn to use this toolkit I'd acquired when I was a teenager, and using my old SF toolkit in some kind of attempt at naturalism, 21st-century naturalistic fiction. But over the last five to six years it's started to seem to me that there's something else going on as well, that maybe we're in what the characters in my novel Idoru call a "nodal point," or a series of them. We're in a place where things could just go anywhere. A couple of weeks ago I happened to read Charlie Stross's argument as to why he believes that there will never, ever be any manned space travel. It's not going to happen. We're not going to colonize Mars. All of that is just a big fantasy. And it's so convincing. I read that and I'm like, "My god, there goes so much of the fiction I read as a child."

From Booklist

Set in the present, Gibson's Pattern Recognition (2002) addressed hacking, viral marketing, global surveillance, and, several years before YouTube and Lonelygirl15, video on the Internet. Spook Country, too, depicts the present, with the future superimposed on it, a layer of data visible only to those who know how to see it. Hollis Henry, formerly the singer in an early nineties band with a cult following and now a freelance journalist, is hired by Node, a Wired-like publication, to write a piece on "locative art," for which a viewer must don a headset to see three-dimensional virtual renditions projected via wireless to an exact location using GPS. Node's funding comes from Hubertus Bigend (returning from Pattern Recognition), the Belgian founder of the "innovative global advertising agency Blue Ant," known for his "ability to find precisely the right person for a given project." In a positively creepy scene, Hollis, upon learning who is funding her job, does a Google search for Bigend and, just after reading a Wikipedia entry on him, gets a phone call from the man himself. Bigend's intentions may be shady, but he is incredibly resourceful. Hollis goes from L.A. to Vancouver to track geo-hacker Bobby Chombo, himself hired by a mysterious outfit to track a missing shipping container. Other colorful characters with cool toys also pursue the container. Still others pursue the pursuers, in typical Gibsonian fashion. Segedin, Ben
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

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6 von 6 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
Gutes Buch 2. Juli 2008
Format:Taschenbuch
Doch, es hat mir gefallen.

Gibson's Schreibe muss man mögen. Lange, verschachtelte Sätze mit der akribischen Beschreibung von Objekten. Das kann ermüdend sein, bis man sich daran gewöhnt hat. Dann aber erschliessen solche Sätze eine Welt, für die es gar nicht mal soviel Phantasie braucht, um sie farbenfroh und detailliert entstehend zu lassen. Ein bisschen wie Fernsehen - man muss nur konsumieren, nicht nachdenken.

Die Story tritt für mich dabei in den Hintergrund. Muss sie auch, denn besonders spannend, bizarr oder sonstwie bemerkenswert ist sie nicht. Das hat dem Buch viel - berechtigte - Kritik eingebracht, wenn man das erwartet. Tut man es nicht, sondern lässt sich statt dessen ein auf die Beschreibung von Charakteren, Orten und deren Zusammenhänge, macht es Spass.

Wenn man die Zeit hat, lohnt es sich, das Buch zu lesen. Während der täglichen Pendelei zum Arbeitsplatz und zurück ist es zu kompliziert. Hier hätte eine durchgängigere Story als roter Faden geholfen.
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11 von 16 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
What a wonderfull read 26. August 2007
Format:Gebundene Ausgabe
Salve,

zuerst denkt man, na nun fällt ihm nichts Neues mehr ein. Wieder eine Frau mit Bezug zur Kunst, die von einem Reichen auf die Suche nach einem Künstler geschickt wird und dabei etwas ganz Anderes finden soll. Dennoch hält die Freude am Lesen die Spannung aufrecht. Die Charaktere sind genial, die Story selbst hat die besten öffentlich bekannten Details zu den Schlapphüten, dem Irak-Krieg und dem organisierten Verbrechen eingebaut. Toll fand ich persönlich, dass ich mich wieder fand, von der Wahl der Autos (Phaeton) über die Herkunft der Personen (Kuba) über viele Details der Handlung. So wie ich dem Autor zustimme in Pattern Recognition P. Hilfinger als Kotztüte der Modewelt dar zu stellen :)

Neben den Details der Szenen und Beschreibung fasziniert, dass die Handlung in drei Fäden aus der Sicht jeweils einer Nebenfigur dargestellt wird. Drei Erzähler, die eine Person begleiten oder suchen, die die Handlung weiter treibt. So bleibt der Leser bis zum Schluss im unklaren, was eigentlich hier passieren soll und wieso, weil die Innenwelt der agierenden Figuren verschlossen bleibt, so wie in Neuromancer die Intentionen von Wintermute und Neuromancer auch erst im Laufe des Buches aufgedeckt werden. Die Ruhe der Handlung auch wenn viel passiert ist fast schon meditativ, von allen SF-Autoren der Beste Wickler von Worten, knapp gefolgt von Iain M. Banks.

Das Ende ist ... nein kein Spoiler hier, nur soviel das Buch zu schließen hinterlässt nur das Gefühl, dass es Schade ist und länger hätte sein können.

Viel Spass beim Lesen!

Translation:
Salve,

my first thoughts were, ok, nothing new here. Again a lady from a gallery hired by a wealthy freak to search for some artist but the real quest is something different. I've read on, just because his use of words is most impressive and hilariously funny. The characters are deep, colorful and you realy get to know them. The story is complicated, incorporates loads of details from the hidden world of espionage, crime and war. Me and the book became good friends when he featured a great car (Phaeton) and cuba as a country with a history. Like when in pattern recognition he dissed Mr. Hilfinger and the protagonist puked whenever she saw a piece of clothing from him.

Apart from this, the book fascinated me, as the story develops by telling the views of three people which are not the focus of the action, but bystanders, watching the characters move and push the storyline. Themselves just being pushed and shoved. As you never know the thoughts of the characters in play, the reader is left in the unknown about the motives and goals, the story and the end of the book stays a secret, like in Neuromancer, where the intentions of wintermute and neuromancer are only revealed near the end of the book.

His calm storytelling felt like meditation, even when the story is full of action. The tao is flowing in his words like nowhere else, ok, Iain M. Banks is very good as well.

The end of the book is ... no spoiler here. It just leaves you with the feeling of a story told and ended in all aspects, but the longing for more time inside is still strong.

Have a good time reading it!
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2 von 3 Kunden fanden die folgende Rezension hilfreich
I have my iPhone 3G ready 8. August 2008
Format:Taschenbuch
I don't know how or why... but William Gibson hits me every time. You always think he is getting kind of old maybe, slowly drifting away. Writing about mainstream now and rather strange topics. However, when you read him, you soon realize, he just has vision. I could never quiet figure out the video footage idea in his previous book Pattern Recognition. All of a sudden Youtube turned up. This time, he writes about locative art. I have my iPhone 3G ready, only waiting for the guy who writes the App. Already today you can do such a thing in Googlemaps. Fascinating.
I had tremendous fun reading the book, sometimes it is just typical Gibson: Read it with a smile, and don't take everything too serious.
Let's see what the next book brings... and even more important - let's see what the future brings.
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