
Neuromancer
by M
About This Novel
This novel gave birth to "The Matrix"! Cyberpunk Bible! Unprecedented record of winning awards: including Hugo Award, Nebula Award, Philip K. Dick Award! A genius hacker, a female killer, a special forces officer, and an expert in mind manipulation. They are hired to do two things: steal a key and obtain a password. They are career criminals and hopeless misanthropes; they are in self-imposed exile while subconsciously searching for a way home. And their employer is the most powerful opponent that mankind has ever encountered since the beginning of civilization...
What Readers Think
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Official(11)Scraped 4d ago
The originator of hackers
This is a work inspired by The Matrix
I don't quite understand it.
cyberpunk
There are many details that combine vivid human nature and cold technology to make people imagine.
This book is quite good (⊙o⊙) (⊙o⊙)
Dreamed about an electronic pig
Glory of Kings, holographic broken shadow, lines
The narrative is difficult to comment on
The plot concept may have been outstanding in that era, but the narrative technique was very messy.
Cyberpunk style~~! I like it so much~Ghost in the Shell~~~
blueprint
It's like technological supremacy, but there are too many machine components. It feels like the human attributes have disappeared
Cyberpunk classic, tsk tsk tsk~~Stable~
neuromancer
Me: One week, I feel pretty good eh eh eh
Rating
Community(0)
Official(11)Scraped 4d ago
The originator of hackers
This is a work inspired by The Matrix
I don't quite understand it.
cyberpunk
There are many details that combine vivid human nature and cold technology to make people imagine.
This book is quite good (⊙o⊙) (⊙o⊙)
Dreamed about an electronic pig
Glory of Kings, holographic broken shadow, lines
The narrative is difficult to comment on
The plot concept may have been outstanding in that era, but the narrative technique was very messy.
Cyberpunk style~~! I like it so much~Ghost in the Shell~~~
blueprint
It's like technological supremacy, but there are too many machine components. It feels like the human attributes have disappeared
Cyberpunk classic, tsk tsk tsk~~Stable~
neuromancer
Me: One week, I feel pretty good eh eh eh
Featured in 7 Booklists
Official(7)
✒✒Hugo/Nebula Award Double Winner A✒✒ No.1 "Dune" Nebula in 1965, Victor Hugo in 1966 Frank Herbert The protagonist ate a special spice in the universe to open his mind and gain the ability to predict the future. However, he saw the inevitable war and killing, and also saw his own tragic ending, the universe, the future, and his destiny... No.2 "The Left Hand of Darkness" Nebula in 1969, Hugo in 1970 Ursula Le Guin It describes a genderless alien culture and uses it to conduct in-depth discussions on gender, society, life, etc. No.3 "Ring World" Nebula in 1970, Hugo in 1971 Larry Niven Niven's most admired work has won three trophies: Nebula Award, Hugo Award and Locus Award. No.4 "The Gods Themselves" 1972 Nebula, 1973 Hugo Isaac Asimov Asimov's first legendary work that won the Nebula Award, the Hugo Award, and the Locus Award, explores everything about parallel universes. No.5 "Meet Rama" 1973 Nebula, 1974 Hugo Arthur Clark The story describes how a fifty-kilometer-long cylindrical alien spacecraft broke into the solar system in the 22nd century, and humans sent an expedition team to investigate. No.6 "Nothing" 1974 Nebula, 1975 Hugo Ursula Le Guin A profound reflection on the development prospects of human society. Where should mankind go? Le Guin does not and cannot provide a clear answer. No.7 "The Thousand Years War" Nebula in 1975, Hugo in 1976 Joe Haldeman "The Thousand Years of War" and its subsequent work "The Thousand Years of Peace" are known as "the most memorable war novels". No.8 "Gateway to the Universe" 1977 Nebula, 1978 Hugo Friedrich Bohr It describes the story of human beings discovering the civilization of strange people and using the spacecraft left by the strange people to travel into space. No.9 "Dream Snake" 1978 Nebula, 1979 Hugo Fonda McIntyre It tells the story of a young woman who relies on snakes in a post-apocalyptic world to create biological medicines to cure diseases. No.10 "Fountain of Paradise" 1979 Nebula, 1980 Hugo Arthur Clark Two thousand years ago, a bloody palace coup occurred in the equatorial island country of Taprobani. The tyrant Kalidasa took the opportunity to come to power but was not satisfied with the joys of the world. He built a kingdom of heaven on the top of a mountain to challenge the gods, and the "Fountain of Paradise" was born. No.11 "The Rising Stars" 1983 Nebula, 1984 Hugo David Brin Brin's "Ascension" series is the most exciting and outstanding science fiction. "Sundiver", "Star Tide" and "Ascension War" have all been on the New York Times bestseller list. No.12 "Neuromancer" 1984 Nebula, 1985 Hugo William Gibson His debut novel created the "cyberpunk" literary genre and gave birth to "The Matrix", which unprecedentedly won the Hugo Award, Nebula Award, and Philip K. Dick Award.



Neuromancer is the first book to win the Hugo Award, Nebula Award and Philip K. Dick Award at the same time. This record has never been broken. The greatest achievement of "Neuromancer", completed in 1984, was to foreshadow the computer network world of the 1990s. William Gibson not only created "cyberspace" (also translated as cyberspace) in his book, but also triggered the "cyberpunk" culture - observing the world with a vision of being obsessed with high technology, but despising the use of high technology in conventional ways. This wave has been growing ever since, impacting mainstream culture.




It's not a web novel, it's a cyber classic, and I like it very much.




The originator of cyberpunk and a masterpiece among science fiction fans. Through this book, you can see an unusual future world. I bought the Neuromancer trilogy. Let me tell you my thoughts after reading it. It was too difficult to understand. I was confused the first time I read it, but in this confused state, I was instantly shocked by the world in the book. To put it simply, I never thought that the future could be like this. It turns out that technology has such an expression! It's simply shocking, you know? But it is not recommended for ordinary people to read it, because you may not be able to read it at all. I have to say whether the author's description of one sentence here and another is a problem of translation or just a style. Anyway, I felt very tired when I read it. The book is difficult to understand and requires a certain amount of literary literacy and patience to read it. The specific content is the contest between artificial intelligence and humans. A must-read science fiction classic! Won Hugo, Nebula and other awards!




