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William Gibson: The peripheral (2014) 4 stars

Depending on her veteran brother's benefits in a city where jobs outside the drug trade …

Review of 'The peripheral' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

The first time I picked this up, I was struck by two things. It feels like Gibson, and, what the hell is going on? I set it down 100 pages in with no clarity, and ended up rereading it from the start a few months later. This second start resulted in the momentum to finish, but now I feel like I've read a 600 page book. At least it is a standalone novel... whoops, now there's a sequel.

Chapters alternate between two different points of view, and later you find out those alternate between two different universes. There are some fantastic scene descriptions, and cool tech makes appearances. "Cyberspace" doesn't show up in this future, but a pocket universe does, and the tech behind that is completely unexplained. Nanobots also show up, in the form of "assemblers", but always under control somehow. And the plot? A very drawn out murder mystery (of sorts) and also a struggle for power between two factions. Neither is particularly satisfying. 2½ stars.