The sky above the Shelbourne was the colour of...
But seriously, here is the text of the interview as promised. I'm sorry it took so long but his accent is really strong and the tape wasn't so good and I was busy with a deadline.
At his reading of _Virtual Light_ later that night he read the text slowly, almost ponderously, which gave me a new insight into his composition. His stresses rendered what might have been a frenzied narrative into a more reflective, metered tract.
He said some good things during the question session. Postmodernism was a phrase that used to make him grit his teeth and think of party hats on tower blocks, but now it's kind of diluted. Sylvester Stallone owns the rights to the Burning Chrome film version. Earlier, he asked what the reaction was of an Irish person to the section at the end of The Difference Engine concerning the Famine in Ireland in the 19th Century that pretty much devastated the country to this day. He seemed a little hesitant, and mentioned that the piece was supposed to be a sarcastic ant, but that if it didn't come across like that then that was what you deserved for messing with other people's cultures. He had a special disdain for that RPG 'that
mixes cyberpunk with elves'. I think Shadowrun sucks incredibly as well.
The ellipses try to capture his frequent pauses. I found his sentence structure fascinating. As a English-speaking Irish person, the rather bizarre formulations that reach here via the films, etc., can seem outrageous. I'm thinking of 'Slackers'. But it's all true. Apparently. Even the incredible lassitude of the Southern US speech. Quite distinctive.
I have, like, ten or so very long interviews from his present tour and he was getting asked the same questions in a lot of them and parroting the same answers so here I've tried to avoid the usual questions. I was not always
successful. I didn't get hardly any of the questions covered that I'd intended to, even though I was quite peremptory. This can come across as impatience (maybe, maybe) or sarcasm, even rudeness. But it *was* a short
interview slot.
I have not rendered the dialogue into dialect, but have stuck to standard English, 'don't know' for dunnoe, etc. This is kinder to non-English speakers, and using that can look patronising and corny.
Interview with William Gibson by Mike Rogers.
Text copyright 1993 by Mike Rogers. Permission is granted for distribution of this text via electronic or electromechanical means providing
- no hardcopy is produced save for comment or reference extracts;
- that this notice accompany all electronic copies.
October 1st, Shelbourne Hotel, Dublin, Ireland.
35 minutes.
MR: So you've never been to Ireland before?
WG: No. no... and it's a, you know, in a sense I've been reading about it all my life... because it's a, you know...
MR: Joyce? the Modernists?
WG: Yeah. Such a literate, yeah, such a literary land. So it all seems... vaguely familiar. But sort of more remarkable... and that's always the way, you know. Sort of the details... the details that do it. That you couldn't have imagined.
MR: You came to Europe when you were in your teens, or just out of your
teens, didn't you?
WG: Well, how old was I?
MR: The Grand Tour. Around 20?
WG: Yeah. Yeah. About 20, 21... We couldn't afford... we couldn't afford to
stay anywhere that had anything remotely like hard currency. So we
landed in... we landed in London and... and you know, like a round trip
on the subway was sort of... sort of, the base. So we only had a little
time there and then...
MR: So what's it like now, travelling around in hotels like this?
WG: Oh, it's... I've had a couple of years to get used to it. It's sort of
a gradual thing.
MR: What was it you called it? The Rubber Chicken Circuit?
WG: Yeah, that was actually a good break... breakthrough. Because there
were all those vr... there was a whole string of vr festivals that were
funded by various European governments.
MR: I know. Lot's of people kept stopping over, Myron Kreuger and all...
WG: Yeah. Those people were all bouncing... bouncing around. But we got to
get to Barcelona, Venice, Linz Austria, Den Haag, probably a couple
more I can't...
MR: You're more used to it then? You can handle it now?
WG: Yeah, I can.
MR: You don't feel like... the dissolution?
WG: But this is sort of... this is a... this is a lot more intense than
going on one of those things, 'cos it's sort of the end of... three
months of... no, not three months, it just feels like three months.
Three previous weeks of promotion before I came... In the States and
Canada before I came and started... started in London.
MR: Yes. I've been reading some interviews on the Net, in papers...
WG: Yeah, and you go home and rest for a week and you feel okay physically
but then you get back out on the road and there's some sort of
cumulative psychological effect.
MR: I'm just curious, because in the second Sprawl book you had Turner, and
he saw himself dissolved from hotel room to hotel room. And yet in
_Virtual Light_ Rydell... he likes staying there. He likes the... the
opulence of the closed shopping malls and all. So, do you feel you're
accepting it more?
WG: Oh I don't know. Oh... you lost me there. Rydell likes?
MR: He seemed to be able to cope with being on Cops in Trouble a lot more
naturally.
WG: Oh. Oh. Ah. Right. Oh, well, you know, he doesn't get more than a taste
of it you know? That's the thing. It's a... His time in... his time...
well he might have... What does he have, like two weeks? It's not
really clear from the... It could be a week you know? It just... it
just doesn't last very long for him. He never gets to feel that he's a
part... a part of this sort of thing. But you know... it's interesting.
It's interesting to see it... and it's only once in a while. I mean,
Hollywood is like this too. It's kind of their standard worker housing.
They put people... they put people in incredibly fancy hotels that...
mostly probably collect their money from movie studios and big... big
companies.
MR: It's a strange world out there.
WG: Yeah. Like one thing you realise when you spend more time in places
like this is that all of them... well, hardly any of them who's staying
here is paying their own bill. It's all corporate accounts. This is
actually a very amiable kind of place, you know? The thing that's nice
about it is that it's real. It's not a reproduction of anything.
MR: If I remember right, when they had a rebellion here in 1916 I think the
place was used for barracks.
WG: Yeah. It's sort of a real place and kind of relaxed compared to... you
know, in America the equivalent thing would be three simulacra removed
from reality and kind of too self conscious to ever be very good.
MR: What music are you listening to right now? What strikes you?
WG: PJ Harvey's second album. A San Francisco band called Come, that's
see oh em ee. A West German band called Plan B who have an album out
that's unfortunately titled Cyberchords and Sushi Stories.
MR: What about Cybercore Network?
WG: ... Never heard of it.
MR: Oh well.
WG: Yeah.
MR: The in-jokes weren't as heavily larded in _Virtual Light_.
WG: No, I just think they missed them. No, they're more subtle.
MR: The music jokes?
WG: There were probably more of those in Neuromancer than there were in the
later... the other two, I would think. Yeah. Yeah. _Virtual Light_ is
filled with in-jokes, but you have to know... It's not fair if I tell
them what they are.
MR: The one right at the end where the only thing at the market that failed
to be sold, that's thrown on the trash heap, that's the Columbia
Literary History of the United States.
WG: Yeah.
MR: That's a bit harsh. An unpopular book?
WG: That's one of them.
MR: There was a large literary conference on here recently. Toni Morrison,
big names. The theme was Homelands. What I want to ask you is, well,
born in South Carolina, grew up in Virginia, living in Canada. Do you
think that that dilutes your sense of nationhood? They were keen on it.
WG: Oh, well... What it means... Yeah...
MR: How do you feel about it?
WG: Yeah. Oh, well. Hmmm. That's a... Oh well, interestingly put... ... ...
I think what it's done is it's made me... made me a globalist in some
way that's not entirely... ... ... isn't entirely theoretical... ...
... Yeah, I mean, naturally it's put... it's putting it too
dramatically, but you could say it was literally true that early on in
life I had the experience of, of, of... exilehood, essentially for
political reasons which kind of led into a permanent expatriate
existence. Canada isn't... it isn't a country. One doesn't... I don't
think one comes to feel Canadian. It sort of isn't. It's never really
been...
MR: So much wasteland? Empty except for the cities?
WG: Well, no. It's never been a requirement of... ... ... It's never been
a requirement of their culture with regard to... immigrants, you know?
The American metaphor is the Melting Pot for a generation and then
they'll become... When they come out of the pots... they'll be American
and that really isn't... That hasn't been the Canadian experience. The
fashionable government metaphor during the sixties was the... the
Cultural Mosaic. That's what they consciously took to be their version
of the Melting Pot. Where people would immigrate, keep their cultures
intact and just, you know, fit them into the grid of the country. I
mean, you can't, you know, the concept of becoming Canadian, it doesn't
you know, it doesn't compute. It's not... in a sense it's an artifical
construction. Really, I mean there's a distinctive Canadian culture
but you know... ... you'd almost have to, I think, have to be born
right into it so I've never felt, living in Canada for twenty years...
Well now I'm truly becoming more and more Canadian. I mean, I'm still
a guy from Virginia and my wife is Canadian and I'll never... I'll
never really be... I'll never really be Canadian.
MR: Yet the character Rydell in _Virtual Light_ seems much more definitely
a Southerner than any others of yours?
WG: Oh yeah. Specifically...
MR: He rediscovers his Southerness after being reproached by a Northerner
for not having enough essence of gothic.
WG: Yeah. Well... I think that was partially inspired by having read a lot
of Cormac McCarthy during the time I was writing the book. I hadn't
discovered McCarthy before. McCarthy's from Knoxville Tennassee, which
is, like, a few hundred miles from the part of Virginia where I grew
up and the voices in a lot of his books, particularly his early books,
were very relevent to my own childhood and so I thought I'd create...
Also, I had the sense when I grew up in the South of growing up in some
sort of time lag.
MR: Agrippa has that same tone.
WG: Yeah.
MR: The timelessness.
MR: Yeah. It's like, so it's like... I felt when I remembered my childhood
in the fifties and the sixties in Virginia that in some ways it's more
like these should be memories of the forties. It's, you know, It's kind
of a backward... It's kind of a backwater place and by making Rydell,
you know, a Southerner I also made him a hick to some extent. So he's
the, you know, he's... he's the hick from Hickograd adrift in the big
city and consequently he gets to wonder about things and ask questions
and that's very convenient for the science fiction writer because it
gets you over the expository lumps quite smoothly. I mean, when you...
In science fiction watch for these naive characters. They're pretty
common because they serve such a convenient purpose for the author.
MR: What struck me was the different portrayal between _Virtual Light_ and
the Sprawl novels in the portrayal of the underground, the computer
underground. Especially the hackers. In _Virtual Light_ you didn't seem
to like them and in fact you threw them into ridicule.
WG: Well, they're both based on... the same... you know, to some extent.
MR: Also... The culture of the bridge. That's seen from the outside. Even
Chevette is to a large extent an outsider. And yet with, say, Sam
Delany in, say, Dhalgren, he had his naive characters walk around as
part of the underground. He's from... he writes from an urban...
environment. You and he are from different milieus. His urban
characters never seem as put upon. They survive a lot easier. He's more
sympathetic.
WG: Well, he grew up in New York and my formative, my first real experience
of a real city was living in Toronto in the late sixties from about
'67 on and, yeah, it's given me a different take on urbanism. It's a
very different sort of city. In those days it was more different still.
It hadn't been quite developed into the new neo-Toronto.
MR: They use it for New York movie backdrops nowadays.
WG: Yeah. Neo-Toronto is sort of... It more parallels... you know, the
Docklands in London? It's a bit, you know, it's very expensively built
empty space.
MR: They're doing that here with German money. Temple Bar. It's quite
extraordinary... They take all the cobblestones from the, like, ghetto
and move them to almost gated streets.
WG: So down in the poor neighbourhoods they now have tarmac?
MR: Yeah, it's like a move up in the world. After hundreds of years they
finally get to have tarmac, flat roads. And the rich people get cobbles
and all.
WG: Isn't that something.
MR: Set in shiny new tar, yeah.
WG: That's truly amazing... That's pure... that's the European version of
_Virtual Light_. Yeah, that's actually... there's a level of irony about
that that I didn't get to in _Virtual Light_. Except in the Nightmare
Folk Art shop. All this Southern stuff is being sold, all these kind
racist antiques are being sold to the more affluent blacks of South
Central. But the very recycling of stuff where the very cobbles become
expensive antiques for the rich people... that's amazing.
MR: The blacks in South Central Los Angeles. I mean, the book was set there
and, I mean, you read City of Quartz which dealt a great deal with the
chicano and black development, and postulated their development in the
future, and yet they didn't feature very largely in _Virtual Light_. Do
you feel that you were't qualified?
WG: No. I didn't want to... It wasn't the time for me to take that on...
Yeah, I would generally say. Yeah. I'm not actually qualified to do
that now, and particularly not in a more realistic near future setting,
so I mean, they're there and there's a sprinkling of them to indicate
their presence in the mix. One thing that's not really underlined
enough to be clear in the Los Angeles sections is that I was assuming
that I was writing about a Los Angeles where the caucasians are the
minority, which is something that is demographically expected to happen
in L.A. eventually.
MR: Yeah. I was stunned the first time I was in New York and found all the
subway signs in Spanish after a lifetime of growing up with the Starsky
and Hutch white English American thing.
WG: Yeah. We have a neighbourhood in Vancouver where they've changed...
they've translated all the streetsigns into Bengali. And there's
Chinatown. That's quite the trend.
MR: And yet you find that you can write about women? All of your books
since Count Zero have had a female protagonist.
WG: I've always felt an obligation to try. And you know, in fact I think I
would tend to get pretty bored with the narrative if there weren't...
a few women around.
MR: And yet the only woman that featured, apart from your relatives, in
Agrippa was the likening of the shooting of a gun to the first kissing
of a woman in objective terms.
WG: Yeah. But don't ask me what that means.
MR: You'll just have to write more books to work it out?
WG: Yeah. No. I don't know. I mean, it's something that I... I do all this
stuff... kind of random exploratory... I'm exploring I know not what.
The completed narrative is a sort of artifact, but in some real way
I'm no more capable of explicating it than the next guy. You know, if
you know much about... at least the sort of... what passed for
contemporary literary critical theory when I was studying it... the
assumption was that the critic has as much... that the reader had as
much chance of knowing what the text was going to be about as the author
did. That was sort of a formal assumption; that the author had no more
access to it...
MR: They're just words?
WG: Yeah. No more access to some deeper, more symbolic level than the critic
did. Because the critic could argue, the critic... the author could say
that, well, it's really about this and that and the critic could argue
that, well, you think it's about this and that but actually it's about
that and this. And you're simply... I'm simply able to interpret your
own conscious intention. I'm not sure whether... I was never sure
whether I believed that or not. But now that I've written a few books I
know that I... that I cannot explicate them more. Or that I could
explicate them differently at different times.
MR: And yet you have this gift for... for semiotic regurgitation.
WG: Well, yeah.
MR: Does it worry you?
WG: What?
MR: Do you occasionally get puzzled, or self-conscious.
WG: Magpie-like?
MR: Like a collage too mannered.
WG: Bricolage. no, it doesn't bother me. It's what I do.
MR: But if you think about it too much? Do you have to make a conscious
effort not to make it a... conscious effort?
WG: Well, it requires... In my own case it requires a kind of pathological
concentration, after which something snaps and the narrative proceeds
as though by... it's almost... I mean, it's really good, it feels like
automatic writing. I'm able to sit back and watch myself write without
having much idea of where it's going along. But unfortunately that
requires endless chewing of pencils.
MR: They used to call it the Muse.
WG: Yeah. Waiting for the Muse. All I've ever figured out is you have to
make a deal with the Muse to, you know, go every day at approximately
the same time; sit down for a couple of hours and wait to see if the
Muse is going to come around.
MR: When do you write?
WG: Well, pretty much on a kind of nine to five basis on weekdays. That's
well, you know, that's in the early days, the saner stages of
composition. So for the first two thirds of a book I'll get up in the
morning at seven o'clock, have breakfast, get my kids off to school.
Then downstairs about nine thirty, knock off at twelve for lunch, come
back, stay on there 'til three or four or five and call it a day.
Unless I get down there and something is... there's no Muse and I can't
get anything done. Then I go mow the lawn or do the laundry or
something. But when I get toward the end of it, it becomes... it's such
an effort to juggle all those bits and thousands of words in your head
that sometimes the only way to get it done is to, like, work an 18 hour
day 'til it's finished, you know? You're filled up with it at a certain
point and you just have... there are times when you just have to get
all through real quickly at one go and then go collapse and then go
back to it a few weeks later and kind of do it in your right mind. I
don't think I've ever managed to avoid that. In one way or another that
always happens. It usually follows a period of very intense despair.
Despair at the quality of the text by that time.
MR: Do you still despair of the text?
WG: Oh yeah.
MR: The finished? The product?
WG: Well, you know, once they're finished, once they're... once they're...
you know?
MR: How do you decide that the text will go?
WG: Well, that's one of the really tricky parts. It's a good trick. I don't
know. I wish I could... I mean, I wish I could tell you. Nobody could
ever really tell me. You just have to know when it's done. You have to
know when you've taken off... when you've taken out as many of the
wrong words and put in as many of the right words as you're likely to
be able to do. And then there's a point beyond which anything you could
do to it would cause it to diminish. And its... to know where that
point is... I just don't...
MR: One fascinating piece I saw in _Virtual Light_ was... I remember reading
a story of yours years ago: Academy Leader. That had a paragraph in it
related to virtual reality architecture and then it gave a listing,
a lush description of arcades, sushi, etc.; and then in Skinner's Room
it had become the Bridge. The people, the ideas were the same. And then
in _Virtual Light_ it appeared. Watching the paragraph through three
incarnations was interesting.
WG: Yeah, I think that... I suspect that Academy Leader was written after
Skinner's Room. That book, that Michael Benedict collection of
cyberspace essays, that's pretty recent. I think maybe more recent than
Skinner's Room. All of... all of that... all of the bits in Academy
Leader are recycled from other pieces. Some of them appeared in an
op-ed piece in Rolling Stone years ago. I mean, it's really only the
little Burroughsian bit, where I'm directly addressing the audience
in a Burroughs cut-up, that's the only... that is the only bit that I
think I actually custom-wrote: the rest of it is a cut-up.
MR: Do you see yourself in your characters? I'm just thinking, here, of
Shapely being tragically misunderstood, distorted, worshipped.
WG: No. No.
MR: And yet Skinner seemd to be very scornful of people that wanted to
Shapely up. For example, on the Net there's a persistent rumour, a
belief fable, that you have an email address. Despite hundreds of
denials in thousands of interviews.
WG: Well... No. No.
MR: I mean, there are people out there who will refuse to believe there
isn't a secret... I'd compare it to a loa. There are people utterly
convinced that some elite has your true name.
WG: Yes.
MR: That these email you. They all want to be watched by you, invisibly.
WG: I think that's a very good... Yeah, I think that's an excellent...
That's an excellent... That's an excellent comparison. No, I'm more
like the... you know, there is... there is a big god in Voudoun
religion, you know? There is... At the top of the pantheon it's
actually monotheistic. But he's so far away... and he just doesn't care
at all. That's actually where I am. I don't care. No, I'm not even...
I'm not even looking. What they have to do is... To come directly to my
attention, they have to... They have to say something that will cause
one or another of my correspondents who does hang out on the Net to
download their bit to a fax modem which'll fax it to me. Virtually
everything... virtually everything I read off the Net comes off of a
fax machine via, sort of, people's fax modems.
MR: That's pretty clever.
WG: And you know, there is the other thing that when you can afford long
distance telephone service and you have a telephone and a fax machine
you've got... you've got an amazing... it's expensive, but it sure is
a convenient user interface. So I mean if I want to... if I want to
talk to someone in Tokyo I don't need email. I just call them and have
a telephone conversation with them for as long as I want and then
charge it to business expenses. Actually, one of the reasons I don't
have an email address is that I average thirty-five feet of unsolicited
fax, of incoming fax, per day. And I don't even have time to read that.
It's like I'm sitting on the toilet down the hall from my office with a
scroll of faxed stuff which I, you know, kind of skim through.
MR: Those rolls much run out pretty often.
WG: Yeah, I mean, it's a shame you can't use them for the bog. I mean,
recyclement which... Yeah, I mean, I buy them... I buy them... by the
box from a Korean greengrocer around the corner from my house. Some
very cheap Japanese fax paper, but it works real well. Yeah, I'd go
through a roll of fax paper every couple of days, and by and large it's
stuff I could do without. I could have lived without seeing it. But I
just haven't lost fax correspondents who see anything that they think
would tickle my interest... Some of it's business. Some of it, you
know?
MR: Sounds like you need seperate lines for it.
WG: Yeah. Yeah. Like unsolicited faxes and business faxes. That would...
That would do the trick.
MR: Some mondo big writers end up employing a personal secretary to handle
all that for them.
WG: ... ... ... Well, I'm getting to the point where I could use a personal
secretary. I can't... I can't really... I can't deal with the snail
mail either. Bags of it.
Enter Viking Penguin Publicity Rep
MR: Uh, oh, here she comes. One last one.
VPPR: The black eagle again, swooping up the stairs. How are you doing?
MR: Just finishing.
VPPR: Grand. Will I come back in a couple of minutes?
MR: Yeah. Great. Okay.
WG: Yes. Yeah.
MR: I've never met a book publicity person yet in Ireland who wasn't female
and English.
WG: I think she's Australian?
MR: Yeah?
WG: Yeah. That's what my wife said. I couldn't... My ears could not... I
can tell the difference between Irish and it anyway.
MR: Okay. Agrippa. It's encoded using the RSA algorithm.
WG: Wow. News to me.
MR: All those algorithms in the States are classed as munitions, as weapons
of war.
WG: Yeah.
MR: So what I... Could your work be one of the first pieces of art to be
restricted because of national security? A couple of weeks ago a person
who was selling a program using RSA got served with a Grand Jury
summons.
WG: Yes, but... Actually that's come up. Someone in the... I forget the
name of which government body it was, but someone was quoted in the
paper as saying we should talk to them. So, but what they didn't...
What it is, you actually can... my understanding of it is that you
could sell... You could sell an encrypted... It's a... What it is...
They don't want... they don't want a... they don't want to distribute
the hardware that allows you to encrypt your own material. But a piece
of encrypted material is of no value to someone who wanted to use the
encryptions. So it's not the same as distributing encryption software.
So, when you buy Norton Utilities for the Macintosh in the United
States or Canada there's actually a sticker on it that says: This
product only for sale in the United States of America or Canada. That's
because of that. Because it's actually... it's actually... the Norton
Utilities comes with this really... potent... munitions grade
encryption.
MR: I know you don't like talking about the underground, or being asked
about the underground, but what do you think of this growing obsession
over the last few years... perhaps egged on by government action, some
feedback... With cypherpunk? I mean the original... your original
envisionment of the Matrix was of an open...
WG: Yeah, it's odd isn't it? It's turned around. I was envisioning people
who were into cracking.
MR: And now they're hiding.
WG: Yeah, now they're, yeah, now they're into hiding.
MR: Bruce Sterling in his The Hacker Crackdown seemed to feel that it would
shrink away, the underground, until eventually, perhaps, there'd be
some new movement that noone could see yet. He seemed to feel that the
day of the hacker is coming to a close.
WG: Well, certainly the Republic of Desire is extrapolated from... some of
the less savoury aspects of the hacker community as Bruce described it
in The Hacker Crackdown. Which is really the closest I've ever come to
to being in direct experience of it.
MR: That was fun for you, wasn't it? When Rydell meets... the three hackers
and their massive ego representations.
WG: Yeah.
MR: One of them was made of television and so Rydell says 'Jesus', which
was quite funny coming as it was from out of a Fallonite community link
there.
WG: Yeah, yeah, that was one of them. The other one was sort of... the one
that looked like a mountain and Jaron Lanier... and it had big lobster
claws. Yeah, so it was.. I wanted to do the... I liked that because it
sort of established that this was not a book in which the hackers were
romantic. You know, when I wrote Neuromancer I'd never even heard the
term hacker. If I had done I would have used it in the book.
MR: In Neuromancer they were modulated by the need for access, to jack. The
same as a Burroughs character has this need for junk. And yet the
desires of the characters in _Virtual Light_ seem to have become more
multifaceted, obfuscated as you go on. I mean, Rydell doesn't know what
he's looking for. He just... He seems to want to... Well, I don't know,
you'd know him better than I do. And Chevette just always seems to want
to get away. So do you feel that that's to do with yourself becoming
more financially secure?
WG: No.
MR: Or older?
WG: Yeah, I think it was an attempt to... Oh I don't know, in some ways as
I get older I feel more desperate. I think it has more to do with an
attempt at literary naturalism and I honestly think that Chevelle and
Rydette... ... Rydell and Chevette... I think that Chevette and Rydell
are more like most people than most people are like those console
cowboys and razor girls in Neuromancer. No, I don't think those people
really know... What They Want in capital letters beyond just getting
by. It strikes me that most people will... are just getting by. One
thing that those two want is to have a job. They want to make a living
and they don't have real good jobs and their jobs are very important to
them. And that's very different from Neuromancer. That's a much more
naturalistic take on human existence than anything in Neuromancer. The
only character in _Virtual Light_ that is anything like a character from
the previous three novels is Loveless the Psychopath, the sadistic
psychopathic killer. And he's... One of the inside jokes with me in the
book is that Loveless is this guy who if he appeared in Count Zero
would just be part of the wallpaper. Turner would kill him, stuff him
under a Volkswagon and go have a cappacino and not even think about it
but in _Virtual Light_ he's this over the top crazy monstrous thing who's
almost unbelievable. He's meant to teeter precariously on the edge of
the ridiculous. So I had him in as being like the... he's the... he's
the only character in thbook who's who's like a character from
Neuromancer, the only semi-major character. And the rest... the rest
of the major characters, they're drawn a different way, you know, and I
like to feel that they're quite a bit less cartooney. They have
character. They have parents and... shifting inner monologue. All of it
you know? I was sort of trying to do naturalism there. But I don't know
they'll make of that on the Net. If I could send them a message... If
Mister Gibson could send a message to the boys on the InterNet I'd tell
them too... tell them to go... to go and get a dictionary and look up the word irony.