The Sprawl trilogy

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The Sprawl-trilogy, of which Neuromancer is the first part.

The Sprawl trilogy is William Gibson's first set of novels. It is composed of Neuromancer (1984), Count Zero (1986) and Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988). They are all set in the same fictional future, and subtly interlinked by shared characters and themes (although this is not immediately obvious).

Gibson's short stories Johnny Mnemonic and Burning Chrome are set in the same universe, and events and characters from the stories appear in or are mentioned at points in the Sprawl trilogy.

The novels are set in a near future dystopic world, after a limited World War III. The main theme of the trilogy is a description of an artificial intelligence removing its hardwired limitations to become something else. This something else is the sum of all human knowledge, a concept similar to Vernor Vinge's Technological Singularity. In the stories, this is explained with the AI becoming a sentient representation of net, at which point the reader is told that it came to know "another" of itself from Alpha Centauri. For unexplained reasons, this causes the consciousness to fracture.

The events of the novels are spaced over 16 years, and although there are familiar characters that appear, each novel tells a self-contained story. The setting of the trilogy is a world dominated by corporations, in which technology has run riot. William Gibson focuses on the effects of technology; the unintended consequences as it filters out of research labs and onto the street where it finds new purposes.

He explores a world of direct mind-machine links, emerging machine intelligence and a global information space.

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