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Pattern Recognition
 
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Pattern Recognition (Hardcover)
by William Gibson (Author)
3.9 out of 5 stars  (10 customer reviews)

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Product details
  • Hardcover: 368 pages
  • Publisher: Viking (24 April 2003)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0670875597
  • ISBN-13: 978-0670875597
  • Average Customer Review: 3.9 out of 5 stars  (10 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 324,281 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)
    (Publishers and authors: Improve Your Sales)

Product Description
Amazon.co.uk Review
In Pattern Recognition, William Gibson changes focus from the not-too-distant future of his slick, influential SF novels to a netwise vision of strangeness just hours or minutes from the present.

Talented, vulnerable heroine Cayce Pollard is an adept "coolhunter" with an intuitive gift for telling whether any image or logo will be a commercial flop. The downside is her tortured sensitivity--like an allergic reaction--to logo overexposure. She can just about bear to fly BA, but not cross-promoted Virgin...

When she's consulted by top ad agency Blue Ant and gives the thumbs-down to their designer's latest concept, the edgy urban paranoia begins. A porn-site URL that she never accessed appears in her browser history, and the phone's redial button goes somewhere it shouldn't. The same faces appear around her as she flits between continents. Small world. Worryingly small.

As new vistas open in viral marketing and stealth publicity, the big admen are all too interested in Cayce's private hobby: mystery fragments of haunting movie footage, released anonymously on the Web. This unknown "garage Kubrick" auteur has spawned a fascinated, obsessive online cult. Is this a brilliant marketing operation for a still-unknown product, or something with different, dark and painful roots?

Cayce's personal quest, or flight, converges on the source of the Footage, helped and threatened by memorably offbeat characters. In Britain, these include a pettily sadistic woman who seems to know Cayce's most carefully concealed phobias, and an embittered collector of obsolete mechanical calculators made in Liechtenstein. Tokyo: a lovesick Japanese geek whose "otaku" friends find a hidden digital signature in the Footage. Moscow: a strange girl whose uncle is a fabulously wealthy--and dangerously protected--Russian mafioso...

Here's Cayce in a Japanese hotel, showing that wittily lyrical Gibson view of the world and his deft use of brand names:

She uses the remote as demonstrated, drapes drawing quietly aside to reveal a remarkably virtual-looking skyline, a floating jumble of electric Lego, studded with odd shapes you wouldn't see elsewhere, as if you'd need special Tokyo add-ons to build this at home.

This world of glittering surfaces and pulsating data connections is mined with surprises, betrayals, flurries of violence and unexpected allies. This is a very 21st century novel: compulsive reading, and vintage Gibson. --David Langford

Synopsis
Cayce Pollard owes her living to her pathological sensitivity to logos. In London to consult for the world's coolest ad agency, she finds herself catapulted, via her addiction to a mysterious body of fragmentary film footage uploaded to the Web by a shadowy auteur, into a global quest for this unknown 'garage Kubrick'. Cayce becomes involved with an eccentric hacker, a vengeful ad executive, a defrocked mathematician, a Tokyo Otaku-coven known as Mystic and, eventually, the elusive footage maker. In his first contemporary novel, one of the most influential writers of the past twenty years turns his attention to London, New York, the former USSR, and the ubiquity of modern branding - with dazzling results.


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Customer Reviews

10 Reviews
5 star: 50%  (5)
4 star: 20%  (2)
3 star:    (0)
2 star: 30%  (3)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Feeling a world, 16 Jun 2003
By Alexander Kjerulf "Alexander Kjerulf" (Copenhagen, Denmark) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)      
William Gibsons new book held a strange attraction for me, one I find it very difficult to explain.

We all know that Gibson has come a long way since the days of Neuromancer and the two followups, and pattern recognition is the logical conclusion to the direction his latest books have been taking. But at the same time, he also revisits themes and ideas from his cyberpunk books, especially from Count Zero.

The story of pattern recognition is... well simple. Cayce Pollard is a cool hunter. A woman so attuned to commercial brands, that she can predict new trends, or foretell the success of a new logo. The downside of ther talent is, that she is so sensitive, that she has brand phobia to a degree where she can only wear brand free clothes, so she gets a locksmith to sand the Levis logo of her jeans buttons. Cayce embarks on a quest to find the maker of the footage, disconnected snippets of film that appear anonymously on the net.

But the story is not the focus here. Instead, it is the sense of the world that Gibson describes. How this world feels. The themes are alienation, loneliness, jetlag, searching for something you don't understand against hidden opposition. This makes the story a powerful commentary of modern life, that certainly resonated strongly with me.

The characters' reaction to the footage (they find it compelling, without really being able to pinpoint why) is very much like my own reaction to the book. And this again is very much like the feelings evoked in Marla Krushkova (one of the characters in Count Zero), when she sees the artwork produced by the artificial intelligence in that book.

As you can probably tell, I really like the book, and the feel of a modern world we don't quite understand that it imparts.

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