Xater said:
Ok guys I need some book recommendations. I am prett much on a Blade Runner trip because of the Final Cut rlease. Can you guys recommend some books that do science-fiction the way Blade Runner does? (I am not sure if that is cyberpunk or is that genre even more extreme?)
Cyberpunk is as good a term as any, sure. Start with the seminal cyberpunk novel: William Gibson's
Neuromancer.
When you're reading Neuromancer, you may feel that you've seen all this before - street smart hackers doing their dirty work in cyberspace, lots of cybernetic prosthetics and enhancements, a somewhat dystopic urban setting, you know the drill. Keep in mind that many of the cyberpunk tropes originated with Neuromancer, and while Gibson didn't coin the term cyberpunk his influence on the genre cannot be overstated. Part of what makes Neuromancer so influential is Gibson's evocative writing, which is top notch and drips with style. If you want cyberpunk, start here, then follow it up with two other books Gibson wrote in the same sequence -
Count Zero and
Mona Lisa Overdrive - as well as his book of early short stories,
Burning Chrome.
Of course, after reading all that you may find yourself a bit worn out by the grey (if not entirely dark) future laid out in Gibson's Sprawl sequence and wondering if every cyberpunk author took the genre so seriously. At that point, you want to read Neal Stephenson's
Snow Crash, which cheerfully takes the piss out of the whole thing. The plot, such as it is: Hiro Protagonist, ronin master of the Metaverse, teams up with the future equivalent of a Valley Girl to try to stop Raven, the baddest motherfucker in the world, who earned his title in part by carrying a nuke around on the back of his motorcycle. While endings aren't Stephenson's strong point and the middle does get a bit caught up in assorted bits of esoteric knowledge, Snow Crash is a tremendously entertaining novel. Sit down in your local big box bookstore, read the opening chapter (it's about pizza delivery; no, really), and I guarantee you'll be sold.
If you'd like to backtrack a bit and read a pre-cyberpunk novel, John Brunner's
The Shockwave Rider has proven to be quietly influential. In part, it's because of the way Brunner's themes predict the cyberpunk movement - it's the story of a young man with unusual power over the global network of a world ruled by corporate interests - and in part because, like Gibson, he's just one helluva writer. It's a terrific piece of 70's SF, that has the feel of pre-Star Wars science fiction films while also being remarkably prescient.
Finally, if you enjoyed the movie, why not go to the source material and read Philip K. Dick's
Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, the inspiration for Blade Runner. The film diverges drastically from the novel, so you can go into it with a basic understanding of what the plot might be and be completely surprised by how different it is from what wound up on the big screen. It's readily available in both a standalone edition and an
excellent omnibus of four novels, if you decide you'd like to jump in and read more by PKD.
FnordChan