Spook Country
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Spook Country | |
US cover |
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Author | William Gibson |
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre(s) | Science fiction novel |
Publisher | Penguin Putnam[1] |
Publication date | August 2, 2007 |
Media type | Print (Hardback), Audiobook |
Pages | 384 pp (hardcover) |
ISBN | ISBN 0-399-15430-2 |
Preceded by | Pattern Recognition |
Spook Country[α] is a 2007 novel by William Gibson.
Gibson announced the book on October 6, 2006 on his blog, where fragments of the novel were posted non-sequentially for some time, leading to much speculation on the content and plot of the novel. Spook Country is set in February 2006,[2] and is a continuation of his previous novel, Pattern Recognition. In an interview with PC Magazine in February 2006, Gibson declared that the book was set " 'in the same universe,' as they say, as Pattern Recognition. Which is more or less the one we live in now."[3]
Contents |
[edit] Characters
Hollis Henry -- Former member of the early-nineties cult band The Curfew, now a freelance journalist assigned by the nascent magazine Node to write a story about the use of locative technology in the art world.
Tito -- Part of a Chinese Cuban family of spies, assigned by his uncles to hand over a series of iPods to a mysterious old man. Adept in a form of systema that encompasses tradecraft, a variant of free-running and the Santeria religion as opposed to the Russian martial art of the same name.
Milgrim -- An Ativan addict being held prisoner by the operative known as Brown, who is coercing him to translate the volapuk encoding used by Tito's family.
Brown -- The lead covert operative for an extra-legal organization. He appears to have had law enforcement training, but little training in tradecraft.
Odile Richard -- A curator of locative art. She is Parisian, but speaks a flawed English that often provides comic relief.
Jimmy Carlyle -- A troubled, deceased member of The Curfew. He was addicted to drugs which eventually killed him.
Bobby Chombo -- An expert in geospatial technologies. His background is troubleshooting navigation systems for the US military. He provides the technology necessary for creating locative art. He refuses to sleep in the same place twice.
Alberto Corrales -- A locative artist living in Los Angeles. His art often recreates the deaths of celebrities such as River Phoenix.
Spook Country also sees the return of two characters from Pattern Recognition, Hubertus Bigend and Pamela Mainwaring, founder and employee of the enigmatic marketing agency Blue Ant respectively.
[edit] Major themes
The book takes a multilayered approach similar to Gibson's novels prior to 2003's Pattern Recognition and treats themes relating to espionage, the nature of media (e.g. locative art), and esoteric martial artistry, as well as familiar themes from the author's previous novels such as emergent phenomena and the sociocultural effects of technology. During a 2008 European tour in support of the novel, Gibson commented that "If the book has a point to make where we are now with cyberspace, is that cyberspace has colonized our everyday life and continues to colonize everyday life."[4]
[edit] Reception and reaction
Please help improve this section by expanding it. Further information might be found on the talk page or at requests for expansion. |
Spook Country reached #2 on the Canadian hardcover best-seller list.[5]
Node Magazine, a literary project in the guise of Bigend's fictional magazine, was created to annotate the novel by an anonymous recipient of an advance copy.
[edit] Footnotes
α. ^ Alternate titles for the novels include The Very Latest, The Most Recent And Terrible News and The Mongolian Death Worm. [6]
[edit] References
- ^ Amazon.co.uk: Spook Country: William Gibson: Books. Amazon.co.uk. Retrieved on 2008-04-05.
- ^ Gibson, William. "My Novel's Set in February 2006"
- ^ February 6 2007 PC Magazine Interview
- ^ [[William Gibson|]]. Interview with Eric Holstein; Raoul Abdaloff. Interview de William Gibson VO (transcription). ActuSF. Paris. March 2008. Retrieved on 2008-04-06.
- ^ The Canadian Press: Arab League chief fails to break Lebanese presidential election deadlock
- ^ Gibson, William. Deeper in the Garden of Forking Paths. Williamgibsonbooks.com. Retrieved on 2008-04-05.
[edit] External links
- Node Magazine tumblog with very short chapter summaries of the new novel.
- WebWatch Q&A: William Gibson, science fiction novelist, page 2, by Steve Ranger, Silicon.com, Monday 6 August 2007*Writing Fiction in the Age of Google: William Gibson Q&A, Part 3, Tom Nissley, Amazon Books blog, July 24, 2007
- Audio interview at CBC Bookclub - Spook Country - (1/2 hr) from 2007: part one runs 13 min; part two runs 17 min.
- node.tumblr.com - Spook Country Chapter summaries and quotations with Google and Wikipedia research
- Spook Country blog - United Kingdom discussion and analysis of Spook Country and unfamiliar or interesting words, ideas or brand names.
- nodeMagazine.com - home of Node Magazine, the fictional magazine mentioned in Spook Country now turned real in cyberspace.
[edit] Reviews
The content of this section may be in violation of Wikipedia's Manual of Style and needs to be integrated into the body of the article. Lists of external links should be converted into in-text citations where possible. |
- A World to Win
- The Village Voice
- BoingBoing
- Washington Post
- The Guardian
- Chris Watson, Bookends: William Gibson explores the science fiction of the here-and-now in his new novel - Santa Cruz Sentinel, August 5, 2007
- 'Spook Country', a novel by William Gibson by Ed Park, Los Angeles Times, August 5, 2007
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