Bryan Alexander's Reviews > The Peripheral

The Peripheral by William Gibson
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really liked it
bookshelves: cyberculture, cyberpunk, design, sf, dystopia

Reading a new William Gibson novel is both delightful and exciting. He delights with the cool, sardonic yet imaginative visions of the present and future. He excites with his uncanny glimpses of the future, grounded in canny selections from our time.

The Peripheral offers another pleasure, that of Gibson trying something new. His recent brace of novels looked at the very near future, each following a normal linear path. His classic cyberpunk or Sprawl trilogy envisioned a medium-term future, also tending to thriller linearity.

But in The Peripheral we see a very different conceit and narrative structure. This novel relies on two timelines, one in the near-to-medium term future, and one almost a century away. At first we follow these in parallel, trying to infer connections. Then we learn that the further-along future has discovered a form of time travel - well, information exchange with the past, to be precise. The far-future signals the closer-to-us future, and has a proposition. Or two. Then more, which aren't propositions but assassinations.

This dual-track time-travel-ish idea owes much to Gregory Benford's 1980 novel Timescape . Other parallels appear; see spoiler section below.

The future-near-to-us characters are also the more sympathetic. They focus on a young, poor Southern woman, Flynn Fisher, and her family. They live in a postwar backwater, where the economy barely exists apart from illegal drug manufacture. Flynn helps her vet brother, Burton, with an online job and witnesses what seems to be a strange murder. In the future-farther-away we see a PR flack, Wilf Netherton, working with a Russian crime family and their staff. Wilf has made an unspecified bad move, and is trying to improve his situation.

To say more will spoil things, so in this paragraph I'll try to sum up what happens next. (view spoiler)

I mentioned earlier that The Peripheral has links to Benford's Timescape. There are more, but they, too, are spoilericious. (view spoiler)

One of the pleasures of reading William Gibson is tracking his experimental words and phrases. These are concentrated projections of a possible future. Let me list some that caught my eye: klepts, artisanal AIs, battle-ready solicitors, court-certified recall, the viz, hate Kegels, autonomic bleedover, continua enthusiasts, drop bears, period trains, neo-primitivist curators, quasi-biological megavolume carbon collectors, heritage diseases, directed swarm weapons, a synthetic bullshit implant, surprise funeral, mofo-ettes, and a neurologer's shop. One near-future treat is the "freshly printed salty caramel cronut".

Some of today's words mutate in these two futures. For example, poor folks don't cook, but build drugs. "Homes" refers not to homies or residences, but to Homeland Security. A very bad crisis happened between now and 2025 or so. People afterwards refer to it as the Jackpot.

Some of the language is simply cute. One character has her name changed slightly, and refers to it as "amputating the last letter of her name." Another speaks of "cleaning up the afterbirth of Christmas ornaments". The Fisher family shops at a Hefty Mart.

In a sense The Peripheral is Gibson's gloomiest novel. Like the recent film Interstellar, this story begins in a bad situation then gets worse. The Fishers are poor and ill (the brother has seizures, the mother seriously ailing) in a society that clearly doesn't care for them at all. Their story reads like something from a late 19th-century Southern backwater, or like today's worst countryside. Characters have little help for the future. What we learn about the Jackpot not only makes things horrible, but sets up a future that's inhumane. Across all of these times looms the specter of vast economic inequality, of a society caring only for the <1%.

There is a powerful sense that the far-future is a kind of 1% taken to an extreme: a lonely elite, casually breaking off temporal worlds as a hobby, easily committing murders. Our lack of information about the world around London's far-future elite disturbs me, the more I think of it. Conversely, the far-future world is situated in such total surveillance that they see our/Flynn's sense of surveillance as charmingly antique.

How does this gloomy novel end, then? Ah, spoilerizing: (view spoiler)

Overall, The Peripheral offers solid future thought in an engaging narrative. Recommended.

I didn't read this one, but listened to it on audiobook. Lorelei King was the reader and did a fine job, with the whole file running a touch over 14 hours. King does different nationalities well, which matters in the kind of multinational world Gibson loves. She reads with the right level of cool, too - not a thriller's burning pace, but with a kind of observation acuity that I always associate with Gibson.
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Reading Progress

July 17, 2014 – Shelved
July 17, 2014 – Shelved as: to-read
October 21, 2014 – Started Reading
October 21, 2014 – Shelved as: cyberculture
October 21, 2014 – Shelved as: design
October 21, 2014 – Shelved as: cyberpunk
October 21, 2014 – Shelved as: sf
November 29, 2014 – Shelved as: dystopia
November 29, 2014 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-15 of 15 (15 new)

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message 1: by Gregor (new)

Gregor Xane Please tell me what hate Kegels are.


Bryan Alexander Gregor wrote: "Please tell me what hate Kegels are."
One character (female) describes being so mad at someone that she does hate Kegels. That's it so far.


message 3: by Gregor (new)

Gregor Xane Bryan wrote: "Gregor wrote: "Please tell me what hate Kegels are."
One character (female) describes being so mad at someone that she does hate Kegels. That's it so far."


Wow. That's great.


message 4: by Tamahome (new)

Tamahome Is she single?


Bryan Alexander Seems to be, but only for now.


message 6: by Tamahome (new)

Tamahome He was just on Agony Column podcast.


Bryan Alexander Was it a substantial piece, or just a quick one?
I've seen a lot of the latter this month.


message 8: by Tamahome (last edited Nov 26, 2014 06:47AM) (new)

Tamahome Substantial. That guy is like the Charlie Rose of book interviewers. That show and Geek's Guide are usually good. They actually read the books.


Bryan Alexander Looks like 50 minutes. Awesome.


message 10: by Steven (new)

Steven I've read Rick Kleffel's print columns - if his podcasts are anything like them, definitely recommended.


message 11: by Tim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Tim Lepczyk Do you think the far-future is a stub of some other future? The way China was described as becoming this tech powerhouse and sort of cut off from the world led me to believe that.


Bryan Alexander Tim wrote: "Do you think the far-future is a stub of some other future? The way China was described as becoming this tech powerhouse and sort of cut off from the world led me to believe that."

*That* is a cool idea. Did you tweet Gibson about it?


message 13: by Tim (new) - rated it 4 stars

Tim Lepczyk I did not, but I will. :)


message 14: by Nick (new) - rated it 4 stars

Nick Doyle have you heard of "the simulation argument" by Nick Bostrom? similar


Bryan Alexander Nick wrote: "have you heard of "the simulation argument" by Nick Bostrom? similar"
As explored in _Superintelligence_?


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