Commercial appeal.

AuthorSuderman, Peter
PositionBriefly Noted - Brief article

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

William Gibson, the novelist who coined the term cyberspace in a 1982 short story, has been hailed as an Internet-age prophet. His early work so thoroughly built the linguistic landscape of the digital era that he finally gave up science fiction to write contemporary novels. The future had caught up with his ideas.

Frequently overlooked is Gibson's penchant for describing societies driven by the dual forces of mass commerce and individual aesthetics. He didn't merely predict a world in which everyone was online. He also foresaw one in which everybody had something to sell.

Gibson's newest book, Zero History, is...

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