![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Two years later he popularized the term in his first novel, Neuromancer, about a washed up hacker hired for one last job. Gibson imagined that sort of culture shock back in 1982 when he coined the word "cyberspace" in a short story. "My greatest pleasure in reading books by other people is to be dropped into a completely baffling scenario," he says, "and to experience something very genuinely akin to culture shock when first visiting a new culture." His latest, Agency, has a complicated plot that jumps between the far future and the immediate present Gibson says his favorite type of science fiction requires time and effort to understand. But in a dozen novels over the last 35 years, Gibson has stalked closer and closer to the present. William Gibson writes visionary stories - in his early work, he imagined an information superhighway long before the Web existed. Your purchase helps support NPR programming. Close overlay Buy Featured Book Title Agency Author William Gibson ![]()
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