

As his team attacked a Soviet computer center, EMP weapons shut down their flight systems. Corto was a member of "Operation Screaming Fist," meant to disrupt Soviet computer systems. If Case completes the job, Armitage will have the sacs removed if not, they will burst and cripple him again.Īrmitage has Case and Molly steal a ROM module that contains the saved consciousness of one of Case's mentors, legendary cyber-cowboy McCoy Pauley.Ĭase and Molly discover Armitage's former identity as Colonel Willis Corto.

Case agrees, and his nervous system is repaired, though sacs of poison are placed in his blood vessels. Case is approached by Molly Millions, an augmented "razorgirl" and mercenary on behalf of a shadowy US ex-military officer named Armitage, who offers to cure Case for his services as a hacker. As punishment, Case's central nervous system was damaged, leaving him unable to access the virtual reality dataspace called the "matrix". Once a talented computer hacker and "console cowboy", Case was caught stealing from his employer.

Henry Dorsett Case is a low-level hustler in the dystopian underworld of Chiba City, Japan. Plot Cover of a Brazilian edition, depicting the "razorgirl" Molly Millions He added the final sentence of the novel at the last minute in a deliberate attempt to prevent himself from ever writing a sequel, but ended up doing precisely that with Count Zero (1986), a character-focused work set in the Sprawl alluded to in its predecessor. Everyone would assume I'd copied my visual texture from this astonishingly fine-looking film." He re-wrote the first two-thirds of the book 12 times, feared losing the reader's attention and was convinced that he would be "permanently shamed" following its publication yet what resulted was seen as a major imaginative leap forward for a first-time novelist. After viewing the first 20 minutes of the landmark film Blade Runner (1982), which was released when Gibson had written a third of the novel, he "figured was sunk, done for. Given a year to complete the work, Gibson undertook the actual writing out of "blind animal panic" at the obligation to write an entire novel-a feat which he felt he was "four or five years away from".
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Neuromancer was commissioned by Terry Carr for the second series of Ace Science Fiction Specials, which was intended to feature debut novels exclusively. The term "Screaming Fist" was taken from the song of the same name by Toronto-based punk rock band The Viletones.

Author Robert Stone, a "master of a certain kind of paranoid fiction", was a primary influence on the novel. Gibson heard the term " flatlining" in a bar around twenty years before writing Neuromancer and it stuck with him. John Carpenter's Escape from New York (1981) influenced the novel Gibson was "intrigued by the exchange in one of the opening scenes where the Warden says to Snake 'You flew the Gullfire over Leningrad' It turns out to be just a throwaway line, but for a moment it worked like the best SF, where a casual reference can imply a lot." The novel's street and computer slang dialogue derives from the vocabulary of subcultures, particularly "1969 Toronto dope dealer's slang, or biker talk". The themes he developed in this early short fiction, the Sprawl setting of " Burning Chrome" (1982), and the character of Molly Millions from " Johnny Mnemonic" (1981) laid the foundations for the novel. Set in the future, the novel follows Henry Case, a washed-up hacker hired for one last job, which brings him in contact with a powerful artificial intelligence.īefore Neuromancer, Gibson had written several short stories for US science fiction periodicals-mostly noir countercultural narratives concerning low-life protagonists in near-future encounters with cyberspace. It was Gibson's debut novel and the beginning of the Sprawl trilogy. Considered one of the earliest and best-known works in the cyberpunk genre, it is the only novel to win the Nebula Award, the Philip K. Neuromancer is a 1984 science fiction novel by American-Canadian writer William Gibson.
