PODCAST: William Gibson on celebrity, technology and top-secret jeans [MP3]
Author
William Gibson has been called the father of cyberpunk and coined the
term "cyberspace" back when Internet was little more than a twinkle in DARPA's eye.
That's enough to mean that he's probably developed a fan base devout
enough to build shrines in his honor, or at least commemorative iPad
apps.
But
if you ask Gibson himself -- like one audience member did during a
Brookline Booksmith reading at the Coolidge Corner Theatre last year --
it still doesn't make him a celebrity. Literary acclaim aside, the
author of Neuromancer
and the rest of the dystopian Sprawl trilogy, said that as a writer, he
gets "only the most homeopathic dose of celebrity," a minimal form of
fame that doesn't merit VIP treatment.
"You
can't even get into the club," he joked. "I could be there at the
velvet rope for a long time, going, ‘but I'm William Gibson!'"
Speculative
fiction fans won't have to worry about velvet ropes on Thursday, August
4, when Gibson will be acting at least a little famous at the Harvard
Coop, signing books and reading from his most recent novel, Zero History.
Update: Gibson's tour dates this week have been cancelled.
It's
not Gibson's first trip to the Boston area for such an event; at last
year's Booksmith presentation, he read from "Muskrats," chapter 13 in Zero History.
In "Muskrats," Milgrim, a recovering drug addict, and retired rock star Hollis Henry--characters from Gibson's 2007 novel Spook Country--primarily
discuss fashion while snacking on croissants. Maybe not what you'd
expect from the guy known for his visionary writings on the information
age, but in Zero History (which John Bowker reviewed after
its release last fall), Gibson uses the fashion industry as a launch
point for a high-tech adventure that begins with a secret denim brand
and ultimately involves government conspiracies and corporate intrigue.
While
Gibson said he has no plans to start his own underground denim line in
real life, he does intend to continue keeping an eye on how, exactly,
people are interacting with increasingly advanced technology. Comparing
his observation to that of an anthropologist, he said he finds it
important to note how people actually use an item, regardless of its
intended purpose. Consider the pager, a staple of every ‘90s drug
dealer.
"The
people who invented cellular pagers never imagine that cellular pagers
would change the landscape of crime in America more radically than
anything since the revolver," he said, "but they did."
Head
to the Harvard Coop for more of Gibson's insights on fame, fashion and
felonies, and don't forget to prep for the event by checking out our
podcast. You could always just show up for the reading without
listening in advance, but wouldn't Gibson be disappointed if you didn't
take advantage of the pervasive technology?
DOWNLOAD: William Gibson at the Coolidge Corner Theatre [MP3]
Recorded live at the Coolidge Corner Theatre on September 22, 2010, courtesy of the Brookline Booksmith; if you liked this, check out the Booksmith's events calendar. To subscribe to our podcast, paste this RSS feed into your podcatcher or feed-reader of choice, or bookmark //thephoenix.com/podcast.