ALL TOMORROW'S PARTIES
By William Gibson
It's not often that science-fiction novels get a major hardcover release.
Like most other genre fiction, SF has paperback blood running in its veins. So
even if you don't follow SF all that closely, you might still suspect that this
new book by Vancouver's William Gibson is a big event.
Gibson, who first attracted a lot of notice with his 1984 novel Neuromancer,
is already something of an SF legend. As the man who coined the phrase
"cyberspace," he is seen as the guru of a whole sub-genre of SF
dealing with digital cowboys surfing visionary landscapes of data. And although
cyberpunk itself may have run its course, Gibson's fan base has remained secure.
While it can be read and enjoyed on its own, All Tomorrow's Parties is
meant to be the third part of a trilogy (or what Gibson has misleadingly called a "triptych"). Its cast will be familiar to those who
have read the earlier novels Virtual Light and Idoru. The main
characters are Colin Laney, the cyber-stalker living in a cardboard box in
Tokyo; Rydell, the taciturn hero; and Chevette, Rydell's feisty ex-girlfriend.
The time is the future, but one so close to our own as to be immediately
recognizable. Most of the action takes place on San Francisco's Golden Gate
Bridge, which is now home to a Bohemian community of squatters. The bridge
itself is a metaphor for the great shift in history that is about to take place
and that only a select few are able to sense coming. Colin Laney and his nemesis
Cody Harwood, a super-media magnate, are two such readers of the radiant gist.
The stakes they are playing for are more than a little vague, but whatever is
going on is big.
Overlaying all of this is a kind of techno-New Age spiritualism, the main
ideas of which are common to a lot of contemporary SF. There is, for example,
the notion that we are evolving into a potentially immortal human-technology
hybrid form, and the presentation of cyberspace as a code for the mystical order
behind the chaos of modern reality.
That may sound heavy, but it's really just a backdrop for Gibson's uncanny
knack for projecting trends in consumer culture. It is in his preoccupation with
the strange domestic details of the wired global mall that we find what is
essentially Gibson. Rydell's "absolutely authentic fake" jeans read
like a signature: "the denim woven in Japan on ancient, lovingly maintained
American looms and then finished in Tunisia to the specifications of a team of
Dutch designers and garment historians."
It's clever stuff, but All Tomorrow's Parties doesn't measure up to
Gibson's earlier work. What made Neuromancer a great book was its
adaptation of popular story-telling forms, especially classic American detective
fiction, into an exciting, freshly imagined context. Unfortunately, this work
has a far less compelling story to tell. The great node of history, which has
something to do with a courier service between 7-11s, is anticlimactic to say
the least. In addition there are a number of missteps in tone, including an
unfortunate scene near the end that plays the villain for comic relief.
There are a lot of great SF novels that deserve the prestige that comes with
a hardcover release and some of them have been written by William Gibson. But in the
case of All Tomorrow's Parties you might want to wait for the
paperback.
Notes:
Review first published December 4, 1999.
BACK