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- From: tsdavies@rodan.syr.EDU (T.S. Davies)
- Subject: Re: _Dog Soldiers_ by R. Stone, a wild ride!
- Message-ID: <TSDAVIES.92Dec27191747@rodan.syr.EDU>
- Reply-To: T.S. Davies <tsdavies@mailbox.syr.edu>
- Summary: Gibson's inspiration
- In-reply-to: alison@wsrcc.com's message of 21 Dec 92 03:05:52 GMT
- Lines: 68
- Organization: Sam Hill Cabal, DS
- References: <BzL9xt.6Gt@wsrcc.com>
- Date: Sun, 27 Dec 92 19:33:15 EST
-
- AC> = Alison Chaiken <alison@wsrcc.com>
- LM> = Larry McCaffery
- WG> = William Gibson
-
- AC> A few weeks ago someone requested names of books that could be
- AC> described as "a wild ride," where the reader feels helplessly
- AC> drawn into a breathless adventure. At the time I couldn't think
- AC> of anything appropriate, but I think _Dog Soldiers_ fits the bill.
-
- [Plot summary deleted.]
-
- Synchronicities strike again. When I saw this message, I was about
- two-thirds of the way through _Dog Soldiers_. I had recently finished
- reading Larry McCaffery's _Storming the Reality Studio_, which I had
- finally remembered to get from the library (I wanted to see if it had
- enough material that wasn't in the special issue of the _Mississippi
- Review_ to make it worth looking for -- it does.), and _Dog Soldiers_
- is mentioned twice -- once in an annotated list of influences on and
- important works of cyberpunk/postmodern fiction put together by
- McCaffery and Richard Kadrey, and again in an interview McCaffery did
- with William Gibson:
-
- LM> What first strikes many readers about _Neuromancer_ is all the
- LM> "cyberpunk" elements -- the exotic lingoes, drugs,
- LM> cyber-realities, clothes, and so on. But in many ways the plot
- LM> here is very traditional: the down-and-out gangster who's been
- LM> fucked over and wants to get even by pulling the big heist.
- LM> Attaching this punked-out cyber-reality to an established plot
- LM> framework must have been a conscious decision.
-
- WG> Sure. When I said earlier that a lot of what went into
- WG> _Neuromancer_ was done out of desperation, I wasn't exaggerating.
- WG> I knew I was so inexperienced that I was going to need some kind
- WG> of traditional plot armature which had proven its potential for
- WG> narrative traction. I had these different things I wanted to use,
- WG> but sine I didn't have a pre-set notion of where I was _going_
- WG> with these things, the plot had to be something I already felt
- WG> comfortable with, a familiar structure. Also, since I wrote
- WG> _Neuromancer_ under the influence of Robert Stone -- who's a
- WG> master of a certain kind of paranoid fiction -- it's not
- WG> surprising that what I wound up with was something like a Howard
- WG> Hawks' film. But it also had a lot to do with that need to feel I
- WG> was operating with _some kind_ of safety net. I couldn't think of
- WG> anything more appropriate than this _film noire_ underworld
- WG> premise to hang all this stuff on.
- (McCaffery 1988:224-225)
-
-
- I thought the title sounded familiar, and after about five minutes of
- scanning the contents of the shelves in our basement, I found it.
- Interesting book -- it does draw you in and drag you along -- despite
- not caring for any of the characters, I kept turning the pages.
-
- McCaffery, Larry
-
- 1988 "An Interview With William Gibson" (14 August 1986,
- Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada), in _Mississippi
- Review_, 16:2/3 (#47/48). Pp. 217-236.
-
- Stone, Robert
-
- 1973 _Dog Soldiers_. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company.
-
- --
- I'm enthralled by combine harvesters. In fact, I yearn to have one -- as a pet.
- From _The Day of the Jackal_
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- T.S. Davies tsdavies@mailbox.syr.edu SHC, DS
-