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WILLIAM GIBSON QUOTES

American-Canadian Author (1948- )

Cyberspace. A consensual hallucination.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Neuromancer

All I knew about the word "cyberspace" when I coined it, was that it seemed like an effective buzzword. It seemed evocative and essentially meaningless. It was suggestive of something, but had no real semantic meaning, even for me, as I saw it emerge on the page.

WILLIAM GIBSON, No Maps for These Territories

The street finds its own uses for things.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Burning Chrome

I ... wanted science fiction to be more naturalistic. There had been a poverty of description in much of it. The technology depicted was so slick and clean that it was practically invisible. What would any given SF favorite look like if we could crank up the resolution? As it was then, much of it was like video games before the invention of fractal dirt. I wanted to see dirt in the corners.

WILLIAM GIBSON, The Paris Review, summer 2011

Addictions ... started out like magical pets, pocket monsters. They did extraordinary tricks, showed you things you hadn't seen, were fun. But came, through some gradual dire alchemy, to make decisions for you. Eventually, they were making your most crucial life-decisions. And they were ... less intelligent than goldfish.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Zero History

A chorus of voices, the past alive in everything, that sea upon which the present tossed and rode.

WILLIAM GIBSON, All Tomorrow's Parties

that truth-is-stranger-than-fiction factor keeps getting jacked up on us on a fairly regular, maybe even exponential, basis. I think that's something peculiar to our time. I don't think our grandparents had to live with that.

WILLIAM GIBSON, No Maps for These Territories

We have no idea, now, of who or what the inhabitants of our future might be. In that sense, we have no future. Not in the sense that our grandparents had a future, or thought they did. Fully imagined cultural futures were the luxury of another day, one in which 'now' was of some greater duration. For us, of course, things can change so abruptly, so violently, so profoundly, that futures like our grandparents' have insufficient 'now' to stand on. We have no future because our present is too volatile.... We have only risk management. The spinning of the given moment's scenarios. Pattern recognition.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Pattern Recognition

If you’re fifteen or so, today, I suspect that you inhabit a sort of endless digital Now, a state of atemporality enabled by our increasingly efficient communal prosthetic memory. I also suspect that you don’t know it, because, as anthropologists tell us, one cannot know one’s own culture.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Distrust That Particular Flavor

The future is already here — it's just not very evenly distributed.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Fresh Air, NPR, Aug. 31, 1993

You know what your trouble is?... You're the kind who always reads the handbook. Anything people build, any kind of technology, it's going to have some specific purpose. It's for doing something that somebody already understands. But if it's new technology, it'll open areas nobody's ever thought of before. You read the manual, man, and you won't play around with it, not the same way. And you get all funny when somebody else uses it to do something you never thought of.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Burning Chrome

That's something that tends to happen with new technologies generally: The most interesting applications turn up on a battlefield, or in a gallery.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Spook Country

I don’t begin a novel with a shopping list—the novel becomes my shopping list as I write it. It’s like that joke about the violin maker who was asked how he made a violin and answered that he started with a piece of wood and removed everything that wasn’t a violin. That’s what I do when I’m writing a novel, except somehow I’m simultaneously generating the wood as I’m carving it.

WILLIAM GIBSON, The Paris Review, summer 2011

This perpetual toggling between nothing being new, under the sun, and everything having very recently changed, absolutely, is perhaps the central driving tension of my work.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Distrust That Particular Flavor

The NET is a waste of time, and that's exactly what's right about it.

WILLIAM GIBSON, The New York Times, Jul. 14, 1996

We monitor many frequencies. We listen always. Came a voice, out of the babel of tongues, speaking to us. It played us a mighty dub.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Neuromancer

The future is not google-able.

WILLIAM GIBSON, comments at A Clean Well-Lighted Place for Books, Feb. 5, 2004

If ignorance were enough to make things not exist, the world would be more like a lot of people think it is. But it's not. And it's not.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Twitter post, Jun. 30, 2012

All any drug amounts to is tweaking the incoming data. You have to be incredibly self-centered or pathetic to be satisfied with simply tweaking the incoming data.

WILLIAM GIBSON, No Maps for These Territories

The past is past, the future unformed. There is only the moment, and that is where he prefers to be.

WILLIAM GIBSON, All Tomorrow's Parties

Whenever the media do try to pick it up, it slides like a lone noodle from their chopsticks.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Pattern Recognition

A snappy label and a manifesto would have been two of the very last things on my own career want list. That label enabled mainstream science fiction to safely assimilate our dissident influence, such as it was. Cyberpunk could then be embraced and given prizes and patted on the head, and genre science fiction could continue unchanged.

WILLIAM GIBSON, The Paris Review, summer 2011

There are times when you can only take the next step. And then another.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Pattern Recognition

It’s harder to imagine the past that went away than it is to imagine the future.

WILLIAM GIBSON, The Paris Review, summer 2011

Our "now" has become at once more unforgivingly brief and unprecedentedly elastic.... This is a function, in large part, of the Rewind button. And we would all of us, to some extent, wish to be in heavy rotation. And as this capacity for recall (and recommodification) grows more universal, history itself is seen to be even more obviously a construct, subject to revision. If it has been our business, as a species, to dam the flow of time through the creation and maintenance of mechanisms of external memory, what will we become when all these mechanisms, as they now seem intended ultimately to do, merge? The end-point of human culture may well be a single moment of effectively endless duration, an infinite digital Now.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Distrust That Particular Flavor

It's easier to desire and pursue the attention of tens of millions of total strangers than it is to accept the love and loyalty of the people closest to us.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Idoru

There are tumults of the mind, when, like the great convulsions of Nature, all seems anarchy and returning chaos; yet often, in those moments of vast disturbance, as in the strife of Nature itself, some new principle of order, or some new impulse of conduct, develops itself, and controls, and regulates, and brings to an harmonious consequence, passions and elements which seem only to threaten despair and subversion.

WILLIAM GIBSON, The Difference Engine

Things aren't different. Things are things.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Neuromancer

The future is there ... looking back at us. Trying to make sense of the fiction we will have become. And from where they are, the past behind us will look nothing at all like the past we imagine behind us now.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Pattern Recognition

Secrets ... are the very root of cool.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Spook Country

I think of religions as franchise operations. Like chicken franchise operations. But that doesn't mean there's no chicken, right?

WILLIAM GIBSON, No Maps for These Territories

When you want to know how things really work, study them when they're coming apart.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Zero History

A nation ... consists of its laws. A nation does not consist of its situation at a given time. If an individual’s morals are situational, that individual is without morals. If a nation’s laws are situational, that nation has no laws, and soon isn’t a nation.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Spook Country

There is always a point at which the terrorist ceases to manipulate the media gestalt. A point at which the violence may well escalate, but beyond which the terrorist has become symptomatic of the media gestalt itself. Terrorism as we ordinarily understand it is innately media-related.

WILLIAM GIBSON, official blog, October 31, 2004

As I luxuriate in the discovery that I am no special sponge for sorrow, but merely another fallible animal in this stone maze of a city, I come simultaneously to see that I am the focus of some vast device fueled by an obscure desire.

WILLIAM GIBSON, Count Zero

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