Paperback, 374 pages

English language

Published June 1, 2008 by The Berkley Publishing Group.

ISBN:
978-0-425-22235-5
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Spook: specter, ghost, revenant. Slang for "intelligence agent."

Country: in the mind or in reality. The World. The United States of America, New Improved Edition. What lies before you. What lies behind.

Spook Country: the place where we all have landed, few by choice. The place we are learning to live.

Hollis Henry is a journalist, on investigative assignment for a magazine called Node, which doesn't exist yet. Bobby Chombo is a producer, working on cutting-edge art installations. In his day job, Bobby is a troubleshooter for military navigation equipment. He refuses to sleep in the same place twice. He meets no one.

Hollis Henry has been told to find him.

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reviewed Spook Country by William Gibson (unspecified) (Bigend Cycle, #2)

Spook Country

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A '90s indie-music star enters the 21st century as a freelance journalist working on a piece about locative art, interviewing a Los Angeles artist who uses augmented reality to restage famous deaths. No one has heard of the magazine she's working for, a Belgian start-up headquartered in London knocking off Wired magazine. Meanwhile, a family of Chinese-Cuban subversives deliver iPods containing data in and around New York City. The family has an occluded past, and is steeped in helpful spiritualism. The family's activities are being tracked by what may be agents of the state, although their provenance is sketchy. Because the subversives text in an obscure Russian-adjacent language, the agents kidnap a drug-addicted translator, and it is from his point of view the agents' part of the story is told. Spook Country tightens these three threads into a knot around the story's almost a McGuffin: one of my favorite minor …