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Virtual Light by William Gibson
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Virtual Light

by William Gibson

Series: Bridge Trilogy (1)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
3,00317914 (3.58)24

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English (15)  French (2)  All languages (17)
Showing 15 of 15
OK, I guess. Not the best Gibson book I've read.
  albin | Nov 3, 2009 |
Bridge series: The first in the bridge series it introduces two central players, Berry Rydell a out of work cop and Chevette, a San Francisco bike messenger. Throughout the story the Golden gate bridge that was made unusable by a earthquake and now functions as a squatters paradise/no mans land looms in the background. This novel is Gibson's first tenative steps toward contemporary fiction. It works, just cutting edge enough to feed the tech heads with solid story and plot lines.
Even though I still yearn for razor girls and console cowboys Vitural light was a great read. think of that..[[ASIN:0595681646 Gideon's Fall: When You Dont Have a Prayer, Only a Miracle Will Do]]
  iayork | Aug 9, 2009 |
I finally gave up on this book. In a way I wish I hadn't it because I got so far - read almost 200 of the 300 pages. But at the same time I wish I'd given up on it earlier because, after reading Idoru, this book was such a disappointment. Both novels are part of Gibson's Bridge trilogy. The universe of Virtual Light however, is less advanced than the Idoru one, and thus closer to our present. There are less innovations and advancements in technology and, furthermore, Gibson isn't particularly detailed in his descriptions of the world this time, which for me is a minus. There are no interesting new gizmos, and no explanations as to how things work. The characters are not very well drawn - I had to keep checking who is who, that's how memorable they were. And, last but not least, the plot just felt so contrived and boring. There were some similar storylines between the two books: e.g. underage girl gets involved in something dangerous/illegal/way out of her league. The difference was that I loved Chia (the girl in Idoru) and found Chevette (the girl in VL) boring as hell. I couldn't care less what happened to her. I don't really know if the book was that bad or I'm just exaggerating because I expected so much more from it. But the fact is it didn't manage to draw me in and I chucked it two-thirds of the way. Still enjoyed Gibson's writing style though and his particular way of creating sentences, and hope that he might redeem himself with another novel. I still want to read the third and last book in this trilogy called All Tomorrow's Parties eventually. Just not right now. ( )
1 vote girlunderglass | Apr 16, 2009 |
Virtual Light is set in the states of Northern and Southern California, in a land and society increasingly divided along the seismic fault lines of wealth and poverty, power and powerlessness. Ex-cop Berry Rydell only wants to make a living, so he signs on with IntenSecure Armed Response and finds himself driving a six-wheeled Hotspur Hussar through the streets of Fortress L.A. Meanwhile, in the dank Bay fog of NoCal's premier city, an ace bicycle messenger named Chevette is about to pick the pocket of another sort of courier - a shadowy agent of the Singapore-based Pacific Rim company that calls all the real shots. Then IntenSecure sends Rydell to San Francisco, teaming him up with Lucius Warbaby, a black skip-tracer adept at hunting people down through the Virtual Rality maze of DatAmerica. Rydell finds himself on a collision course that results in a desperate romance and a journey into the ecstasy and dread that mirror each other at the heart of the postmodern experience.
Virtual Light is Gibson at his dark, comic, most inventive and imaginative best: It is a novel of relentless suspense, and an unforgettable portrait of life on the edge in the twenty-first century.
  rajendran | Feb 24, 2009 |
The action takes place in a lovely cyberpunk San Francisco atmosphere.
I found it rather slow to start, almost the first half of the book is needed to settle the "décor" and all in all there is no much suspense. A bit like all the polar story was there just to bring the reader into Gibson's world. But it's also what we're waiting from him ;-) Not a good story but a world both strange and hyperrealist, a future ( )
  doegox | Jan 4, 2009 |
This is classic William Gibson. Set in the near-future dystopian society of North and South California, Gibson plays his traditional trick of introducing diverse characters and situations and gradually knitting them together into a climactic ending. Centred on the society that has grown up on the Bridge, anarchic, antiestablishment, unmonitored, he creates a world apart but one with its own life and heartbeat. The reader roots for the odd cross-section of individuals carving a life on the new frontier. He has created a dark, bleak but believable future world. There's just enough difference to make it foreign and alien, enough touchstones to make it a tangible future. The technology is futuristic without being ridiculous. It's a backdrop to a dark, violent subculture in a world dominated by all-powerful corporations, outside the law. There is an enmeshing of Eastern and Western cultures creating a hybrid society, truly globalised, with blurred boundaries. Gibson effectively tells the stories of his protagonists' lives through a mix of narration, personal recollection, flashback and memories of others. It takes the reader the full duration of the book to flesh out fully each character and event. Is this a genre novel? Definitely. Is that a bad thing? Not at all! ( )
  klarusu | Jul 22, 2008 |
It took a while to get into Virtual Light, I think mainly because of the unfamiliar vernacular Gibson writes in. Eventually, though, VL turned out to be a rather high-paced and fun adventure. Quite an original story, undermined only a little by the unreality of so many characters being ignorant about the extremely recent (10-15 year) history of the world they live in. Definitely worth a read, and I'm already off to start on Idoru. ( )
  philosojerk | May 11, 2008 |
Your future may not be bright if you are wearing these shades.

Gibson's technological level regresses from that of the Sprawl books. No cybernetic implants here, but old fashioned gear like googles and gloves for connections.

A lowly courier gets into trouble when lifting the wrong pair of glasses - a super advanced gear prototype with some startling abilities.

Through in a down on his luck investigator and another shady, seedy tale follows.

http://notfreesf.blogspot.com/2007/12/virtual-light-william-gibson.html ( )
  bluetyson | Jan 12, 2008 |
Typical 4 star story from William Gibson with an extra half star for Frank Mueller's wonderful narration. ( )
  PghDragonMan | Dec 10, 2007 |
  www.snigel.nu | Nov 17, 2007 |
I found it to be a step below the level of the Neuromancer series. ( )
  stpnwlf | Jul 16, 2007 |
Amazon.com
The author of Neuromancer takes you to the vividly realized near future of 2005. Welcome to NoCal and SoCal, the uneasy sister-states of what used to be California. Here the millennium has come and gone, leaving in its wake only stunned survivors. In Los Angeles, Berry Rydell is a former armed-response rentacop now working for a bounty hunter. Chevette Washington is a bicycle messenger turned pick-pocket who impulsively snatches a pair of innocent-looking sunglasses. But these are no ordinary shades. What you can see through these high-tech specs can make you rich--or get you killed. Now Berry and Chevette are on the run, zeroing in on the digitalized heart of DatAmerica, where pure information is the greatest high. And a mind can be a terrible thing to crash. ( )
This review has been flagged by multiple users as abuse of the terms of service and is no longer displayed (show).
  EricaKline | Jan 16, 2007 |
I liked this story a lot more the first time I read it, when it was called Snow Crash.
Virtual Light lifts the characters and locales of Snow Crash, while omitting the humor and intricate background stories that made Snow Crash so interesting.

I've now twice been horribly disappointed by William Gibson but it won't happen again --- there are plenty of other authors to read, and too little time for trash. ( )
  name99 | Nov 13, 2006 |
Virtual Light by William Gibson

If Gibson is the father of the cyber-punk branch of the sci-fi family tree, then this book, Virtual Light, is one of his first kids, who ended up in therapy.

This is one of Gibson’s first books, and with Neuromancer, paved the way for many other techno-savvy authors (like Cory Doctorow), and probably revolutionized the science industry itself. The way Gibson describes his future technology, like Stephen Baxter, makes you wonder why you cant just go out and pick it up at Wal-Mart. the difference, however, is that while Baxter's tech is smooth lines gleaming surfaces like an iPod, Gibson's is half-rusted held together with tape and may be sticky.

I enjoyed this book, but am looking forward to a more experienced Gibson. 2.5 on LibraryThing. ( )
  rphbamf | Apr 23, 2006 |
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