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    Count Zero by William Gibson

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    (Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

    • Pub. Date: April 1987
    • 256pp
    • Sales Rank: 43,826
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      • Overview
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      Product Details

      • Pub. Date: April 1987
      • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
      • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 256pp
      • Sales Rank: 43,826

      Synopsis

      A corporate mercenary wakes in a reconstructed body, a beautiful woman by his side. Then Hosaka Corporation reactivates him, for a mission more dangerous than the one he's recovering from: to get a defecting chief of R&D-and the biochip he's perfected-out intact. But this proves to be of supreme interest to certain other parties-some of whom aren't remotely human.

      Annotation

      Enter the world of a terrifying high-tech future gone awry, a world where computer chips are implanted directly into the brain of a child, where artists hide underground like hunted prey, and where a new force has invaded Earth's Computer Matrix--a force that's playing for keeps . . . Count Zero Interrupt. Count Zero is the sequel to the award-winning novel, Neuromancer.

      Publishers Weekly

      Gibson's first novel, Neuromancer, was greeted with hosannas and showered with awards. This second book, set in the same universe, again offers a faddish, glitzy surface not unlike that of Miami Vice. Gibson's central image is the shadow boxes constructed by the artist Joseph Cornell, collections of seemingly unrelated objects whose juxtaposition creates a new impression. In the same fashion, the novel has three protagonists, each of whom is putting together jigsaw clues in pursuit of his separate goal. The corporate headhunter, the art dealer and the computer hacker all find themselves being manipulatedjust as the author contrives to have their paths converge. This book is less appealing and less verbally skillful than Gibson's first novel, dense and dour as that was, but readers who liked that one will want to see this as well. (March 26)

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      Biography

      William Gibson's feat of imagination, embodied by the seminal "cyberpunk" novel Neuromancer and subsequent sci-fi techno titles, was in presaging the Information Age and coining some of its language even as he remained a technological laggard who eschewed computers.

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      Customer Reviews

      Count Zeroby Anonymous

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      September 13, 2007: This novel moves quickly at a kinetic pace,good charater developement with tight concise prose. A early winner from Gibson.

      Count Zeroby Anonymous

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      April 19, 2004: I first read Count Zero 15 years ago when it first came out, and at the time I thought it might have been the best sci-fi novel ever written. After recently catching up on Gibson's latest work, I decided to go back and re-read the Sprawl Trilogy (Neuromancer, Count Zero and Mona Lisa Overdrive). Count Zero isn't quite as good as I remembered, but it is still a great novel, and the elapsed time has shown not only how much Gibson has influenced the genre, but pop culture and society in general. The Matrix movies, for example, were stolen from, er...influenced by the Sprawl novels, with their hipper-than-thou cyber-cool attitude mirroring the world evoked by Gibson's poetic prose. Three intertwining tales merge at the end of Count Zero to form a larger picture about the thin line between artificial intelligence and life itself. This is well-written science fiction, one of Gibson's best.


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