In “Distrust That Particular Flavor,” Gibson pulls off a
dazzling trick. Instead of predicting the future, he finds the future all
around him, mashed up with the past, and reveals our own domain to us as a
science-fictional marvel. Gibson’s writing enters the bloodstream like a drug,
producing a mild hallucinogenic effect that lasts for hours. In one essay
(originally a talk he gave in 2008) he introduces us to “Martian jet lag,” an
actual sleep disorder suffered by people whose jobs require them to stay in
sync with the Red Planet: it’s “what you get when you operate one of those
little RadioShack wagon/probes from a comfortable seat back at an air base in
California.” (...)
Such is the power of his prose that when I glanced up from
the pages of this book and surveyed the street-side around me, I felt as if I
were wearing Gibson-glasses. Cars lumbered past like ponderous elephants of
rusty steel, not so different from the cars of 30 years ago, and seemed not to
belong in the same world as the tattooed kid punching code into his laptop
nearby. Under the spell of this book, I suddenly understood my surroundings not
as a discrete contemporary tableau but as a hodgepodge of 1910, 1980, 2011 and
2020. “The future is already here. It’s just not evenly distributed yet” — this
quote is often attributed to Gibson, though no one seems to be able to pin down
when or if he actually said it.
Pagan Kennedy, book Review of Distrust that particular flavor by William Gibson, in The New York Times, Jan. 15 2012.
William Gibson é o autor do livro de ficção científica NEURO-MANCER (1984) editado em Portugal pela Gradiva com o título NEUROMANTE (2004), livro que popularizou o termo ciberespaço. A recensão refere-se ao seu recentemente editado primeiro livro de ensaios.
Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário