William Gibson
A most wonderful cyberpunk author (can you say Neuromancer?)
* Icephreak feels The Force. He is among us. *
Icephreak: He must be.
Gardner: At the magazines, we still read our own
slushpiles.
* Nothing taps fingers impatiently *
Icephreak: Mr. Gibson, send me a pair of shades,
brother!
Android: I can smelll him.
hiroshi: Mr. Gibson, what is your inspiration
Icephreak: Get out.
Moderator: Gardner?
Joblard: My inspiration? I just
walk around and things stick to me. It's not a conscious gig, you
know?
Moderator: 120 wpm? Typing faster than ever?
Gardner: Right here, Boss.
Gardner: Hi, Bill.
Moderator: Joblard AKA Mister Bill can type too!
Gardner: Typing with my FEET.
Joblard: Hi, gardner.
Moderator: Intro time:
Moderator: Hi everyone, thanks for joining us! Our
guest tonight is William Gibson, the renowned writer and Velvet
Underground fan (some may recognize ALL TOMORROW'S PARTIES, the title of
Gibson's latest novel, as a riff off Lou and John) Bill's earlier books,
NEUROMANCER, MONA LISA OVERDRIVE and the short story collection, BURNING
CHROME, defined a popular new subgenre in the already compartmentalized
world of science fiction and fantasy -- cyberpunk.
Moderator: This chat is co-sponsored by Asimov's
Science Fiction Magazine which you can find on the web at
http://www.asimovs.com. And the host for tonight's chat is Asimov's own
lovely and talented editor, Gardner Dozois! A big round of virtual
applause please...
Gardner: Don't forget the ASIMOV'S commercial.
Moderator: Brief word about the drill -- this IS a
moderated chat and that means you will be sending your questions for Mr
Bill to me, Moderator, as private messages. Don't know how to send
private messages? Just double-click on my name and voila! you're in
private message mode.
Gardner: The cheers are deafening!
Moderator: I ced the floor to you, Mister Dozois...
Moderator: cede
Moderator: that's what I meant.
Gardner: So, Bill, you sitting around waiting for The
End Of The World As We Know It?
Joblard: I've never actually done
one these before. I did by phone, before...
Gardner: It's just like phone sex, except with typing.
<g>
Moderator: And with GARDNER.
Joblard: A live chat, I mean. Not
worrying about the apoclypse. Porklips. Whatever.
Moderator: We have some audience questions...
Gardner: I'D worry about Porklips.
Joblard: Bring 'em on...
Moderator: <Clockwork> : good first question: How
do we know you're the REAL WmG and not an artificial construct?
Gardner: Let him have them!
Joblard: You don't. That's the
nature of the postmodern, you dig? Simulacra and shit...
Gardner: How do you know YOU'RE the real YOU,
Clockwork? <g>
Moderator: (The Moderator is declaring a moratorium on
Keanu Reeves questions, by the way...)
Gardner: You might have been replaced by a pod while
you weren't looking.
Joblard: I don't. I'm sort of a
congeries of feedback loops, it often feels like.
Moderator: Here's another:
Gardner: How do you know he's not Keanu Reaves
PRETENDING to be Bill Gibson?
Moderator: <BlitzFire> : To Mr. Gibson: For what
reason did it take so long for you to realize the potential of
Neuromancer as a movie?
Moderator: I'm not gagging.
Moderator: That's how I know.
Joblard: Uh...
Joblard: I wasn't TRYING to take
20 years. It just did. And previous experience made me a bit nervous,
yes?
Gardner: Writers don't usually have the final word in
deciding how and when movies get made...
Gardner: What was the previous experience, for those
not up to speed?
Joblard: Well, no, but I've sort
of aspired to that. I can be done. Maybe. Sort of.
Moderator: I think you got a private send there.
Joblard: Well, JOHNNY M, which I
had a lot more to do with than you'd imaginer from the outcome.
Moderator: Here's another question:
Moderator: <Tiger-T> : A question for Bill
Gibson: since you're a newcomer to the Internet, did that change your
vision of what cyberspace "feels" like for your characters?
Moderator: Station identification: our guest for
tonight's chat (which is cosponsored by Asimov's Science Fiction
Magazine -- http://www.asimovs.com, on a browser near you!) is William
Gibson. Please sen your questions for WG to me, Moderator, as private
messages. (Double-click on my name to get into private message mode.)
Joblard: Yeah. It made it banal,
which was a great relief. Not so OOOOH-WAW, you know?
Moderator: <Drayth> : Do you feel yourself still
influenced by the people and things you were influenced by when you
began writing. You'd mentioned william burroughs
Joblard: Well, the deep
influences are still there but I'm not aware of them. The recent ones
can be more problematic.
Joblard: I find myself trying to
write like Iain Sinclair, for instance.
Moderator: Related question:
Gardner: Do you feel that your writing has changed
since you wrote NEUROMANCER? If so, in what way has it changed?
Moderator: <VirtualRose> : Question: Without a
doubt, there's been countless souls that have claimed that the
inspiration for their work was you. Out of all those people, is there
anyone who impressed you?
Moderator: Take Gardner's first!
Joblard: First one: well, I lived
20 years in between... I'd hope that would be reflected. I think of
NEURO as having been channeled in my late 20s out of my my adolescent
self.
Gardner: Which self do you feel you're channeling now?
Joblard: Second one, um, no, not
really. Actually that makes it harder to take them seriously. Jack
Womack for instance had never even heard of me, and THAT impressed
me.
Moderator: <Lord-Visor>: The most pronounced
change of style I noticed in your writing, besides the Difference Engine
came with Virtual Light - did anything specific prompt that?
Joblard: Synaptic
breakdown?
Joblard: Micro-strokes?
Gardner: Visitation by the Holy Spirit?
Joblard: Temporal lobe
epilepsy?
Moderator: Y2K?
Joblard: Visitation by Philip K
Dick?
Moderator: All of the above?
Moderator: <EuroCorpAGENT> : Have your ideas been
influenced by any computer games or the ideas wherein? Games such as
Syndicate Wars and other "cyberpunk" related games?
Joblard: YES!
Gardner: Was that "Yes" for the gaming
question above?
Joblard: Er, no. Not really.
Bigtime not really.
Gardner: Have you ever played such a computer game?
Gardner: Especially one influenced by your own work?
Moderator: Gauntlet's kind of fun. Except that my 5
year old consistently beats me...
Joblard: No, it was no. And no, I
never have. Likely never will. Lack the gaming gene.
Moderator: <Drayth> : Do you feel that the advent
of fame has disrupted what would otherwise be your thought pattern and
perception of things?
Gardner: You should call the Family Abuse Hotline,
Moderator.
Moderator: Or Dr. Laura!~
Gardner: That's metaphysics, Drayth. If you had a
brother, would he like noodles?
Joblard: Well, yes and no. It has
but I've remained aware that it has. In a way that's the subtext of the
three most recent books...
Moderator: <canaccij> : Do you ever think you
would be interested in writing for your own series on television (like
x-files)...perhaps something on the scifi channel?
Joblard: Yeah. I've discussed it
at times. It's a truly Godawful job if you really want to maintain
control. Chris Carter is superhuman.
Moderator: <VirtualRose> to <Moderator>:
another question: what do you think will happen at 00:00:00 1/1/2000?
and how far from civilzation do you plan to be?
Moderator: Station identification: our guest for
tonight's chat (which is cosponsored by Asimov's Science Fiction
Magazine -- http://www.asimovs.com, on a browser near you!) is William
Gibson. Please sen your questions for WG to me, Moderator, as private
messages. (Double-click on my name to get into private message mode.)
Gardner: How far from civilization can you GET might be
an even better question. <g>
Moderator: In a celler with a can of beans and a
candle?
Joblard: I'll probably be right
here in my basement. I think bugger-all will really happen. Lot of
survivalists shooting themselves, maybe.
Gardner: My guess is that Y2K is going to be the Fizzle
of the Century.
Moderator: Yeah, but all the survivalists will be over
the border from vancouver -- in Seattle!
Moderator: <zamirii> : do you feel the world is
starting to reflect some of the darker parts of your novels?
Joblard: Agreed, but historically
it'll go down as first global recognition of the extent of
interconnectivity.
Gardner: I wouldn't want to be in Times Square, because
it'll be packed full of crazies, and a tempting target for terrorism if
there's going to be any. Otherwise, though...
Moderator: You still there, Meester Bill?
Moderator: Type to us!
Joblard: Actually, no. Some parts
(former Sovworld, say) very dark, other parts very light. More a mixed
bag. Dystopias as inherently fantastic as utopias.
Moderator: Survivalists got yr computer?
Moderator: <calladonna>: Neuromancer established
many of the technical terms we use for computer tech today. What
resources did you use to create the technical terms and ideas in
Neuromancer?
Joblard: I'm a slow
typist...
Moderator: Just wanted to make sure you hadn't crashed.
Joblard: I am...Joblard. Says so
right here.
Joblard: Is there a siognal to
let you know utterance is complete?
Gardner: I think Bill is responding to some private
zends, since that last question didn't appear on the screen.
Gardner: Bill, when you're finished with a statement,
type GA.
Joblard: Uh, no, never mind. Go
on...
Joblard: Ah, GA!
Moderator: Nope, I protected him from private sends!
Moderator: No distractions!
Moderator: None of the time!
Moderator: <Tadziki> : Question for Mr. Gibson:
is there an underlying psychological reason why your stories usually
feature tough-as-nails punk rock babes in heroic roles?
Moderator: Ahem! Tough-as-nails punk rock babes are the
best!
Gardner: You can say GA, or, if you prefer, GOO GOO GA
GA. <g>
Moderator: Or Georgia.
Joblard: I have a soft spot for
tough-as-nails punk rock babes.GA
Gardner: Careful! Moderator IS a tough-as-nails punk
rock babe!
Moderator: That's RIGHT!
Moderator: <Rigged>: Does Mr. Gibson have any
predictions about the next century?
Gardner: She'll reach through your modem and rip your
lungs out!
Moderator: Then I'll smoke them.
Joblard: That's why mysoft spot
is acting up? (It's on top of my head.)GA
Moderator: Predictions? Next century?
Joblard: Faster, pussycat! Kill!
Kill!GA
Gardner: (You all DO know that technically the next
century doesn't start until after 2001, right?)
Moderator: <Gomi> : Your predictions of "the
net" has held up extraordinarily well. How well do you think your
more current predictions will hold up?
Joblard: Probably not so well.
The nature of current history makes classical extrapolation difficult to
say the least.GA
Moderator: <alienharris> : when does WG think we
will have direct neural interfacing?
Joblard: Within a
decade?GA
Gardner: Bill, would you GET direct neural interfacing
if it was available?
Joblard: About as readily as I'd
get my myopia corrected with laser surgery. I MIGHT, but I'm in no
hurry.GA
Gardner: I'm not so sure I want the equvilent of The
Phone Company rewiring MY head! <g>
Moderator: <splitenz> : Mr Gibson: What are you
obsessed with at the moment?
Joblard: Gardner's head: hell of
a job for that lineman...
Moderator: Even Glenn Campbell recoils in horror...
Joblard: I'm still obsessed with
vintage watches, but it's turning into an anthropolical exploration of
the otaku syndrome...GA
Moderator: <cyborgmama>: Okay when will corps own
people?
Gardner: You mean they DON'T already?
Joblard: "The myth of human
capital".... (Gardner gets it.)GA
Moderator: Station identification: our guest for
tonight's chat (which is cosponsored by Asimov's Science Fiction
Magazine -- http://www.asimovs.com, on a browser near you!) is William
Gibson. Please sen your questions for WG to me, Moderator, as private
messages. (Double-click on my name to get into private message mode.)
Moderator: <laplaine> : Any plans to do another
novel with Bruce Sterling?
Joblard: Well, we'd have to find
a TOPIC we could both obsess over, and so far none has turned
up.GA
Moderator: <zoos> : Will you be playing an active
role in the development of the Neuromancer movie? It's been rumoured
that Toronto will be the setting. Is this true?
Joblard: No T-o as far as I know.
I'm very involved, to the extent that it's happening at all.GA
Moderator: <VirtualRose>: how much did you know
about computers before writing Neuromancer?
Joblard: As much as I could learn
by eavesdropping, drunk, in a convention bar in Seattle in 1980.
Literally.GA
Moderator: <Vogel>: Q. for Mr Gibson: Do you
read any SF for fun? If so, what recent stories have you liked, and why?
Joblard: Uh, well... I haven't,
much, lately. I advise you all to read Iain Sinclair and Cormac
McCarthy. Do that and you won't even NEED me...GA
Moderator: <LordElgin> : When you collect watches
are there particular periods, movements, or m,anufacturers you like the
best? Curvex movements, presentation watches, etc?
Joblard: I'm into entry-level
vintage Rolex windups and JLC military issue. (weird squeaky nerd
sounds)GA
Gardner: Did you ever wonder what turn your career
would have taken if you HADN'T happened to be in that particular bar at
that specific time?
Moderator: <gosub>: Mr. Gibson: What kind of
computer are you using now?
Joblard: Gard: gently alcoholic
clerk in used bookstore that smells of cat-piss. Definitely.
Joblard: other guy: Performa
5200CG.GA
Moderator: <BlitzFire> : To Mr. Gibson: What's
your favorite liquor? Or beer for that matter...
Moderator: And...
Moderator: <valjean> to <Moderator>: Does
alcohol increase creative thought?
Gardner: Gee, Bill, did you ever think of doing
computer endorsements? Could be Big Bucks in it...
Moderator: (valjean also wants to know if you like
dolphins. valjean -- what's NOT to like?)
Joblard: Well, used to be very
partial to Holsten Pils, which I only ever had in the UK.GA
Moderator: <cyborgmama>: Tell us about Phillip K.
Dick's influence on you... please.
Joblard: valjean: a tricky
question, that. Yes, for about ten minutes, then, increasingly, no. Tho
as Martin Amis says, hangovers aren't the worst place to start.GA
Joblard: Gard: Nobody wants me to
endorsae their stuff. Anyway I'm such a Machead...GA
Moderator: No Y2K troubles there!
Moderator: Did you want to comment on the Phil Dick
influences?
Joblard: PKD: precious little,
honestly. I think I got my PKD-like moves from Pynchon, mainly.GA
Moderator: <laplaine> : Do outline your stories
first, then write the details, or go whole hog as it comes to you.
Joblard: No, no outline. E.M.
Forster said a writer in control of plot and charaqcter was clearly NOT
doing his job.GA
Gardner: William Burroughs and Raymond Chandler are
obvious. Any SF writers who were a big influence on you?
Moderator: <EuroCorpAGENT> : why are you so into
japanese backdrops for your novels? is there any reason in particular?
Moderator: Station identification: our guest for
tonight's chat (which is cosponsored by Asimov's Science Fiction
Magazine -- http://www.asimovs.com, on a browser near you!) is William
Gibson. Please sen your questions for WG to me, Moderator, as private
messages. (Double-click on my name to get into private message mode.)
Joblard: Gard: well, Leiber,
Sturgeon, Bester come to mind. Fritz was a bigger one than I usually let
on, I think. Some of his darker 60s stuff was very pre-CP.GA
Gardner: I horrify myself by having a media question:
What did you think of THE MATRIX? Seemed obvious to me it had been
heavily influenced by your work.
Moderator: Leiber's Coming Attractions, certainly.
Joblard: You know, I liked the
damned thing. I thought it was big, generous, essentially good-hearted
movie, with no overtly fascist subtext. And I thought the WG influence
was adequately digested. No floating gristle...GA
Gardner: Leiber's Time War stories as well. Gritty,
urban, and urbane.
Moderator: I'm gonna back up to an earlier question I
thought was interesting...
Moderator: <EuroCorpAGENT> : why are you so into
japanese backdrops for your novels? is there any reason in particular?
Joblard: Yeah. Fritz was a very
urbane character, and that's not always been the norm her in, you
know?GA
Moderator: Fritz was amazing.
Joblard: When I was about 12, I
wrote Fritz a letter and got a postcard back. Big deal at the time. Nice
man.GA
Moderator: I used to visit Fritz in his Geary street
apt. Did you want to comment on JaPANESE influences in yr work?
Joblard: Well, there's a lot of
asian influence here in Vancouver, and the success of NEURO in Japan
took me there twice. I just find them fascinating. More so somehow than
China etc., not sure why. Inherently more kinky, I think.GA
Moderator: <lx> : Mr.Gibson: what kind of
religion will we have in the future?
Joblard: 12 Step programs and
role-playing games, basically.GA
Gardner: How does it feel to be adequetely digested?
<g> Are you now part of the zeitgeist, like the dial tone on the
telephone?
Joblard: It
feels....goooooood.... Like oxtail soup...GA
Moderator: Gardner! You're making my head ache!
Moderator: <Flanker> : what kind of music does
Wiiliam Gibson listen to?
Joblard: alt.country, a lot. Nick
Cave's THE BOATMAN'S CALL. Scud Mountain Boys. Emmylou Harris. There's a
new Steely Dan album next month. Good, too.GA
Moderator: <zoos> : Would you agree that
technology is reaching such a critical mass that we will one day return
to a more simplistic way of living?
Joblard: Not unless something
f8cks up really badly, we won't. I wouldn't think.GA
Gardner: The only way for most of us to return to a
more simple way of living is to die.
Joblard: Yep.GA
Moderator: Or to hide out on New Year's Eve in that
cellar with that can of beans...
Gardner: Dying is fairly simple.
Moderator: <joed6> : for mr. gibson: what was
your inspiration for the walled city?
Joblard: The actual Walled City
of KOWLOON. Find a book called CITY OF DARKNESS. It's gone now,
demolished.GA
Moderator: <BlitzFire> to <Moderator>: To
Mr. Gibson: You said that Japan has an influence on your work. Would
you include anime (Japanese animation) as part of this?\
Joblard: Well, peripherally. Mr
daughter is a big anime fan.GA
Moderator: <Lord-Visor> : What do you think can
be done to prevent the total loss of privacy? DNA testing, Safe-T-Cam,
pattern recognition, everyone's every detail stored and every movement
tracked etc, ripe for abuse......
Joblard: I'm inclined to think
it's gone anyway.ga
Moderator: <Gmmas> : Bill: do you think that
artificial intelligence will ever become "sentient"?
Joblard: are we
Gardner: An even better question: if it's
"sentient," why should it do what WE want it to do?
Moderator: Because it lacks ambition?
Joblard: yeah, but we won't
know....ga
Moderator: <BlitzFire> : To Mr. Gibson: If you
could choose to be any one character from your novels, who would it be
and why?
Moderator: (The whole bossiness thing is a biological
artifact, no?)
Joblard: mr. yamazaki, good
job.ga
Gardner: If you could choose to HAVE DINNER with any
one of your characters, who would it be?
Joblard: molly1ga
Moderator: And our last question of the evening -- I'm
sure Mister Gibson's fingers must be getting tired...
Moderator: <cyborgmama> : so if y2k isn't going
to get us... will a magnetic polar shift, a plague or just general greed
and nastiness be our downfall?
Joblard: relax, kids... ga
Gardner: I also have a last question of the evening:
Moderator: The suspense!
Gardner: What's your next novel going to be about? And
are you ever going to write any more short fiction?
Moderator: Yes, short fiction please!
Moderator: I love the architecture story in Burning
Chrome!
Gardner: <Gardner also puts in a bid for short
fiction>
Gardner: <Of course, he has an ulterior motive>
Moderator: Short stories are a higher art form than
novels -- that's yr motive. Right, Gard?
Gardner: Of course. <folding hands serenely>
Joblard: (1) Maybe something with
(deranged, natch) contemporary setting? (2) I'd LIKE to but it's not
really cost-effective, sad to say. Novels pay the mortage better. But I
do get the itch, now and again...GA
Moderator: Bill -- thanks so much for joining us here
tonight!
Gardner: Next time you get the itch, go ahead and
scratch it!
Moderator: This was fun.
Gardner: Bill, have you ever wanted to do a completely
NON-Bill Gibson-like novel?
Gardner: A high fantasy or something?
Moderator: Something Jane-Austenish, say?
Joblard: Thank you! It's
been....epochal! Now I see why people do this. Ignore all previous WG
chats. They were...augmented. My tulpa did them for me. G'night!
8-DGA
Moderator: Good night, Bill!
Gardner: Good night, Bill!
Moderator: Ladies and gentlemen -- an exciting first.
Joblard: GOOD NIGHT,
ALL!GA
Gardner: There'll be a lamp in the window for you at
ASIMOV'S if you ever want to Come Home! <g>
Moderator: Bill Gibson did his own typing tonight --
and found out why this is FUN.
Moderator: Gardner does his own typing every two weeks!
Joblard:
fun.....fun.....fun.....GA
Gardner: <robotic voice> ...typing...is...fun...
Moderator: So you should check back in to see who
Gardner has line up -- Michael Swanwick, I believe!
Joblard: fun...fun....GA
Moderator: And Lucius Shepard!
Joblard: GA...GA....GA
Gardner: Next chat is with Michael Swanwick and Lucius
Shepard, Bill.
Joblard: lucius
is.....fuuuuuuuuun......GA
Moderator: That's Bill Gibson for the Georgia State
Tourism Board!
Gardner: You ought to come join us.
Gardner: It could be an Ace Specials reunion!
Joblard: I'm outa here!GA
Moderator: And now, we're gonna go UNmoderated...
Moderator: Hold on...
VirtualRose: goodnight!
Moderator: There!
Gomi: WOW!
timezone: Bill, don't go......
Gmmas: thanks Bill, Gardner, and Moderator, and Happy
new year!
Bastard: hoh
Clockwork: A fine chat! Well done!
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