I
imagine there are many readers who came to the work of William Gibson
long after he had made a name for himself, only to be disappointed.
The hype did not match the fiction. And yet for those readers, I
would guess the stories linger longer than they expected. Some
fundamental understanding, some raw human relationship to technology
and culture was present in Gibson’s novels in ways they may not
have consciously realized. Bringing that understanding to the
surface is Gibson’s 2012 collection of non-fiction Distrust
That Particular Flavor.
A
myriad, Distrust That
Particular Flavor delivers a
wide-wide variety of writing. Not only essays, the book likewise
collects speeches, magazine articles, newspaper copy, interviews,
autobiography, book introductions, travel pieces—all from such
disparate sources as Wired, The
Observer, Forbes, Rolling Stone, New York Times Magazine, The Whole
Earth Catalog, and many
others. Covering a span of approximately sixteen years, the
twenty-six pieces of non-fiction are all short yet profound in some
fashion; the quiet intelligence and insight into human existence
underlying Gibson’s novels is here openly revealed for what readers
have suspected all along.
In many
ways, we look to writers to put into words things that we know to be
true but can’t quite articulate as metaphorically or accurately as
they. One can visit a place or city, for example, and get an
impression, but it’s the (good) writer who can convey or
contextualize those feelings or reactions in concise, meaningful
fashion. Gibson does precisely this throughout Distrust
That Particular Flavor.
Whether it’s his perspective of Singapore after a brief visit or
Japanese culture, introduction to the work of Jorge Luis Borges, the
global transition from analog to digital, the intentions or lack
thereof of technology, or simply the human desire to have stuff,
Gibson’s eye to detail to reality and ability to deftly describe it
(always relayed in the most telling yet minimalist lexicon) is
fascinating. Based on this, it’s possible to argue that Gibson’s
non-fiction may in fact be the root from which his reputation as a
socio-techno guru is derived.
But more
than nimbly defining aspects of human existence as of the beginning
of the 21st century, Gibson likewise offers insight into areas and
offers connections to things that most people may not have taken the
time to think about or link together. Gibson is famous for saying
“The street will find its
uses…” (essay included),
but beyond this, Distrust That
Particular Flavor contains a
multitude of further insights, from counter-culture generation
evolution to hipster cool, ebay culture to Japanese film, surfing the
web to how the future is indeed now. Through these and other facets,
Gibson’s “outsider” view, or at least end to end view of the
slow infiltration of technology into society, provides a perspective
the modern young person empirically cannot have.
All in
all, and regardless whether you’ve read Gibson’s fiction or not,
there is a wealth of insight into life at the turn of the 21st
century present in Distrust
That Particular Flavor that is
invaluable to the Western world. As technology weaves its way ever
deeper into culture, society, and the human mindset, Gibson is there
to put some perspective on it. Vinyl records may be outdated, but
the majority will far, far outlast the lifetime of most digital
albums—something which Gibson further contextualizes in terms of
mindset and outlook and without dipping into maudlin nostalgia. If
you have read Gibson’s fiction, Distrust
That Particular Flavor is
likewise invaluable in helping understand it—the motivations, the
themes, the seeming fascinations, all are spelled out in a direct
fashion the books do not offer. A quick, dynamic read, the table of
contents is relatively lengthy but the overall content is little more
than 200 pages, meaning a lot of bang for the buck—spark for the
bitcoin? (Sorry, bad joke.)
Essays,
comment pieces, presentations, speeches, etc., etc., the following is
the table of contents of Distrust
That Particular Flavor:
African
thumb piano
Rocket
radio
Since
1948
Any
'mount of world
The
baddest dude on Earth
Talk for
Book Expo, New York
Dead man
sings
Up the
line
Disneyland
with the death penalty
Mr.
Buk's window
Shiny
balls of mud: Hikaru Dorodango and Tokyu hands
An
invitation
Metrophagy:
the art and science of digesting great cities
Modern
boys and mobile girls
My
obsession
My own
private Tokyo
The road
to Oceania
Skip
Spence's jeans
Terminal
city
Introduction:
"The body"
The Net
is a waste of time
Time
machine Cuba
Will we
have computer chips in our heads?
William
Gibson's filmless festival
Johnny:
notes on a process
Googling
the cyborg
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