"xpress.interview" - читать интересную книгу автора (Gibson William)

Ottawa X-Press cover, Sept. 22, 1993 (colour shot of Gibson leaning over a combination ad/bike rack, headline: "William Gibson's reality". The ad is blacked out, and the following Virtual Light quote inserted over top: There was a product called Kil'Z that Rydell had gotten too know at the Academy. It smelled, but faintly, of some ancient hair-tonic, flowery and cool, and you used it in situations where considerably bodily fluids had been spilled. It was an anti-viral agent, capable of nuking HIV's 1 through 5, Crimean Congo, Mokola fever, Tarzana Dengue, and the Kansas city flu. He smelled it now, as the IntenSecure man used a black anodyzed passkey to open the door into 1015.) by Mark Shepherd William Gibson is staring at a black sculpture on the ground level of the World Exchange Plaza, a extremely upscale shopping site in the heart of downtown Ottawa. Not only is Rinaldo, Mila Mulroney's hairdresser here, so too are bike couriers, as the Plaza often serves as an informal hangout, if not backdrop. It's a particularly interesting piece: narrow see-through tubes moulded into the sculpture hold souvenirs of Hong Kong, and
printed circuit boards are pasted onto the edges of it. "This is very cool, great, very Gibsonian," he intones, as he gazes intensely at his surroundings. Earlier in the afternoon Gibson was entertaining fans down at the House of Speculative Fiction on Fourth Avenue in the Glebe, a moderately affluent section which juts across Bank Street. About seventy fans, mostly university students in leather jackets and jeans, showed up for autographed copies of Gibson's latest novel, _Virtual Light_. A man from the Tea Room next door to the small book store vainly tries to give away samples of "Arctic Fire" tea and is promptly ignored. A CBC camera crew hovers at the bottom of the stairs, asking emerging fans what cyberpunk is. William Gibson is widely considered to be the father of "cyberpunk", dark novels about hi-tech computer bohemians and underground renegades. His first novel, _Neuromancer_, bears the singular distinction of winning the Hugo, Nebula, and Philip K. Dick awards, a veritable "grand slam" of SF honours. _Virtual Light_ is his first published work in nearly three years. Gibson and I sit down at a cappuccino bar and chat briefly over coffee. Gibson orders a latte, and I have the same.