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All Tomorrow's Parties book review
posted by magd0971 on Monday May 31, @12:40PM ( Printer Friendly Version.| Email this article)
Science Fiction Amy Harlib reviews William Gibson's novel All Tomorrow's Parties, and says it 'represents Gibson in top form'. To find out why, read her full review.


Title: All Tomorrow's Parties
Author: William Gibson
Reviewer: Amy Harlib
Reviewer URL: aharlib@earthlink.net
Publisher: Berkley Publishing Group; reissue edition
Publisher URL: http://penguinputnam.com/static/packages/us/about/adult/berkley.htm
Publication Date: February 2003
Review Date: May 28, 2004
ISBN: 0-425-19044-7
Price: USD 7.99
Book URL: http://www.williamgibsonbooks.com/books/parties.asp
Author URL: http://www.williamgibsonbooks.com/index.asp
Pages: 339pp
Format: mass market paperback
Topic: fiction
Topic: science-fiction

All Tomorrow's Parties concludes the popular trilogy - that includes Virtual Light (1993) and Idoru (1996) - set towards the close of the 21st Century. As much character-driven as plot-driven, the story focuses on the approach of what celebrated American, cutting-edge, SF writer Gibson calls a 'nodal point', a moment in history when certain patterns, trends and data associations converge in a critical moment that can irrevocably change life on earth.

A young man named Colin Laney, down-and-out, (except for his computer interface), in Tokyo, is both blessed and cursed with the ability to read these nodal connections, this talent brought about by childhood exposure to an experimental drug. Laney perceives a nodal point coming, potentially equally calamitous as the previous one in 1911.

Unfortunately so does megalomaniacal industrialist Cody Harwood, who has also dosed himself with Laney's drug, effectively creating the node. As part of his plan to ensure influence over it, Harwood plans to build a network of nanotech replicators, presently forbidden by most governments, in every one of his franchised, ubiquitous, world-wide Lucky Dragon convenience stores.

Laney's and Harwood's struggle to influence the outcome of the nodal points draws in number of characters, many of them 'old friends' from the previous two books in the trilogy, and they all head for predicted 'ground zero' - the Golden Gate Bridge in San Francisco, now too earthquake-damaged to support motor vehicle traffic. The famous span, currently transformed into a huge, self-governed, build-it-yourself shanty-town populated by hip outsiders, provides the locale for a gathering of: Laney's old pal, former rent-a-cop Berry Rydell, to whom Laney has given money and a package which conceals a projector containing the virtual personality, or idoru, Rei Toei; an erstwhile bike messenger named Chevette; the weird, watch-loving, intuitive, net-surfer Silencio; the mysterious hacker inhabitants of the virtual Walled City; Harwood's shadowy assassin Konrad; and motley others. Rei Toei proves pivotal in the conclusion that Gibson builds up suspensefully only to end it all with a bittersweet, supremely ironic twist.

All Tomorrow's Parties proves a delight to read, filled with Gibson's vividly conceived near-future scenarios and concepts: the neural implants; the matte-black cybergear; the nanotech construction materials; the miscellaneous repurposed cultural detritus - not to mention the whole crew of appealingly eccentric characters. All this, set forth in the author's unique and astonishingly textured prose, rich in off-the-wall ideas and extended metaphors, amidst the intriguing character interactions and exciting plot developments, represents Gibson in top form - essential reading for SF afficionados.

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