Alex Morse reviewed Mona Lisa Overdrive by William Gibson
Review of 'Mona Lisa Overdrive' on 'Goodreads'
1 star
Interesting ideas, worst storytelling I've read in a "popular" book in ages. If it had been a movie I'd ask for my money back.
Paperback, 360 pages
Published May 27, 2021
Vstupte do Gibsonova jedinečného světa – lyrického i mechanického, erotického i plného násilí, střízlivého i vzrušivého – v němž mnohonárodní společnosti a desperáti vybavení nejmodernější technologií soupeří v boji o moc a cestují do počítači generovaného vesmíru zvaného kybersvět. Do tohoto světa přichází Mona, mladá dívka s temnou minulostí a nejistou budoucností, jejíž život se ocitá ve střetu se světově slavnou hvězdou senzonetu Angie Mitchellovou. Od dětství se Angie uměla dostat do kybersvěta bez počítače. Z nitra kybersvěta řídí únos přízračná entita, která vytváří plány pro Monu, Angie a veškeré lidstvo, plány, které nelze nijak kontrolovat a ani poznat. A za zápletkou probleskuje stínová Yakuza, mocné japonské podsvětí, jehož vládci nelítostně manipulují lidmi a událostmi tak, aby vyhovovaly jejich záměrům… …anebo si to alespoň myslí.
Interesting ideas, worst storytelling I've read in a "popular" book in ages. If it had been a movie I'd ask for my money back.
I originally read this in high school, but I'd forgotten most of the details, so I decided to do a reread after finishing one of Gibson's newer novels (Pattern Recognition). Like Tolkien, it's one of those classics that's been copied so much that the original has begun to seem clichéd. It probably doesn't help that a good portion of The Matrix was lifted directly from this book. It also suffers a bit from an dating; in 1984, it was generally assumed that the Cold War and Japanese economic dominance were here to stay.
Having said, that, it's still an entertaining read, with an unpredictable plot and interesting views on personality and identity. It probably wouldn't make much of a splash if it were published today, but the genre today would be very different if Neuromancer had never been published.
Holds up amazingly well over the years, and easily one of my favorite books, part of one of my favorite series. I adore the stripped down writing style, the characters, everything. Bloody lovely.
Another cyberfantasy from the author of Neuromancer. A good read, but be prepared to re-read a few sections a few times to follow the plot.