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Science Fiction
Neuromancer by William Gibson

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Science Fiction3.9320K ratings·Published 1984

Neuromancer

by William Gibson

Pages271
DifficultyChallenging
ToneHard-boiled
CategoryScience Fiction
Kineno editors

Editorial review

Gibson's debut introduced the word 'cyberspace' and effectively founded cyberpunk as a genre. Forty years on, its imagery — corporate enclaves, jacked-in consciousness, mirrored sunglasses — is so absorbed into the culture that you might miss how original it once was.

In brief

AI-generated summary

Case, a washed-up data thief in a near-future Japan, is hired by a mysterious figure to pull off the impossible job: a heist inside cyberspace that will free a fragmentary AI from its constraints. The novel's plot is famously disorienting and famously worth the disorientation.

What you'll leave with

Key takeaways

  • 1

    Corporations can become quasi-states; identity becomes a contested infrastructure.

  • 2

    AI is approached most usefully as a question about agency, not just capability.

  • 3

    Style is itself argument; cyberpunk's surfaces are part of its meaning.

  • 4

    Genre fiction can do philosophy under cover.

Who should read this

The right reader

Readers interested in AI, cyber-anything, or the deep history of the internet imagination.

Themes

What it touches

CyberspaceAICorporate powerIdentity
Emotional tone

How it reads

Hard-boiled, neon-soaked, prophetic.

Reading difficulty: Challenging

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