Bruce Bethke
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Bruce Bethke is an American author, best known for his 1980 short story "Cyberpunk" which led to the widespread use of the term, and his Philip K. Dick Award-winning novel, Headcrash.
Bethke's collected thoughts on the cyberpunk subculture are collected on his website, in an essay entitled "The Etymology of Cyberpunk".[1]
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[edit] Life
Bethke lives in Minnesota where he works as a developer for supercomputer software.
[edit] Published fiction
[edit] Mavrick
Written from an outline by Isaac Asimov in 1990, this novel was one of a series of novels set in Asimov's Robot universe.
[edit] Headcrash
Bethke's first published novel, Headcrash is the story of Jack, a male in his mid twenties, who lives with his overbearing mother, works a dead-end job at a software firm, and escapes to the salve of virtual reality on the internet. The sites of questionable legalities cause the geeky Jack to find himself in a legal quandary when he is approached to hack into a Super User's company.
This work is credited with the first use of the word "Spam" as a term for junk e-mail.
[edit] Rebel Moon
A collaboration with Vox Day, Rebel Moon was the novelization of the prequel of the game Rebel Moon Rising. The main plot is similar to The Moon is a Harsh Mistress, though the book itself focuses on a few individual characters and their battles in the war and not the political and economic ramifications of a battle for independance on the moon.
[edit] Wild Wild West
The novelization of the critically panned steampunk film Wild Wild West. Bethke summarily dismisses the novel on his website, stating it was how he paid for a new roof for his house.
[edit] Unpublished fiction
[edit] "Cyberpunk"
Initially written as a series of short stories in 1980, the culminated novel was purchased by a publisher via an exclusive contract which forbid Bethke from selling a novel to any other publisher. The publisher decided to not release the novel, causing several years of legal battles over the rights to the book. Bethke has a downloadable version of the novel available for five dollars on his website.
This work is credited with the first use of the word "cyberpunk."
[edit] References
- ^ "The Etymology of Cyberpunk" from Bethke's website