Archive for September 2007

CBC Audio Interview with William Gibson

Finally, the CBC “Words at Large” Bookclub podcast of William Gibson’s appearance is now available for audio download [link corrected by mi shi]! To my knowledge, this is the first audio interview where Gibson discusses this blog and its sister the Node tumblog.

If you missed the last one of these interviews, you can listen to the 2003 Bookclub audio as well.

More Spook Country Reviews [updated]

Here are a few more reviews of Spook Country [initially courtesy of oddmanrush]:

My favorite of the new bunch is Regis Behe’s “Author captures world chaos in ‘Spook Country’” [Pittsburgh Tribune Review]:

“In the early ’80s, if we thought about cyberspace at all, it was somewhere very special that we went occasionally,” Gibson says. “But the rest of the time, we were here. What’s happened is the very special place we used to go for adventures has become the here. That’s where a lot of us are, most of the time. It’s a very special place, and kind of the unusual place is becoming the place where we aren’t connected to anything.”

NodeMagazine: “Cheap A.I.”

Kevin Broome logs this summary of William Gibson at the CBC Book Club [scheduled to air Saturday September 15, between 8 and 9 a.m. and then available as a podcast on CBC Words At Large on Wednesday September 19].

He tells us of a fan site called Node, named after the under-the-radar magazine that the protagonist is hired by in Spook Country, on which Gibson fans have mapped any and all linkable references found in the pages of the novel. Gibson marvels at the speed that such endeavours can be executed in this day and age. A dozen people, in different times zones, “who are crazy” can achieve enormous things. Gibson describes it as cheap A.I.

And this from Steppin’ Locust on the William Gibson message board:

Seek: NODE online – encyclopedia of Spook Country’s details and marginalia – visual concordance to each googleable reference in the novel - Google is there the way your memory is there – your brain is going to grow into google

We volunteer to become parts of vast distributed intelligences that are fantastically smarter than we are.

Node 1, 2, 3…

Memetic Engineer has now created a secret subsite annotating the Node tumblog in chronological order [a much more accessible method, especially for newcomers].

Mirror, Mirror, Node Again

Bruce Sterling calls this interview by Joel Garreau for the Washington Post, the one of the best William Gibson interviews ever:

“It’s curious. When I published ‘Pattern Recognition’ ” — his previous book, which was also set in the recent past and achieved mainstream success — “within a few months there was someone who started a Web site. People were compiling Googled references to every term and every place in the book. It has photographs of just about every locale in the book — a massive site that was compiled by volunteer effort. But it took a couple of years to come together.

With ‘Spook Country,’ the same thing was up on the Web before the book was published.” Somebody got an advance reader copy, and instantly put up a site for his fictional Node magazine.

Plus, if you just can’t get enough, there is the story by Michael Janairo about the story by Professor Sutherland about this site and the node tumblog.

ASCII Locative Art

Matrix Goggles: “Russian artists from Moscow presented in London the totally useless but somehow cool device - goggles that you can put on and feel yourself like a robot from a Terminator movie or like somebody else from ‘the cyberspace’.” [via William Gibson]

For more on locative art, check out Drew Hemment’s Locative Arts page:

The artist: the first person to set out a boundary stone, or to make a mark.When the oceans became navigable due to the invention of the chronometer as an on-board ship location device, the view of the Earth and our relationship to it changed, and so did the forms of representation used to express or explore that relationship. The first photographs from the Apollo space missions changed once more the view of the Earth, and produced one of the most iconic, and ubiquitous, images ever produced. Today it is digital and satellite mapping technologies that have caught the attention of a new generation of artists and DIY technologists, who are exploring the use of portable, networked, location-aware computing devices for user-led mapping, social networking and artistic interventions in which geographical space becomes a canvas.

NodeMagazine: Completely Overhauling Literary Criticism

This is so spooky, I can’t help but laugh!

Immediately after reading an article on conspiracy theories about Denver International Airport [or “Kansas” as many of us in the Denver area like to call it], I found Node idea, an article by John Suthlerland for Guardian UK about the William Gibson’s “theory of a new and innovatively creative reading practice” floating on a “critical cloud” of fan-promoted literary criticism combating professional neglect and “antibuzz”:

Node-man, a Gibson fan, has duly set up a website with the devotional URL node.tumblr.com. Node-man also got a very early copy of Spook Country. The fan is unidentified: Gibson knows who he is, and says he lives in small-town USA and wants, apparently, to stay anonymous.

Apparently patternboy is now all grown up and hiding underground after mobilising “a volunteer army of fellow enthusiasts” [that would be you, Memetic Engineer] to create a “Google aura” for promoting Spook Country.

What the unknown Node-maestro has done is poles apart, both from this, and from the usual website-based ‘everybody pitch in’ mess. He’s channelled the raw material supplied by his volunteers into a sign-posted route through Spook Country. It opens the way, I believe, to a new kind of critical commentary on texts. One can see, easily enough, how it could be extended to Paradise Lost, or Hamlet.

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