Customer Reviews
Virtual Light - By: dogbarkssome, 26 Apr 2007 
Set in the very near future San Francisco (in fact, by now a few years in the past!) this novel follows the trail of a pair of information-filled 'virtual light' sunglasses, the bike courier Chevette who steals them on a whim, & the burnt-out rentacop Rydell who is tasked with recovering them. Plot-wise this is fairly standard thriller territory, with criminals, bent cops, & unwitting heroes caught up in the chase to secure the sunglasses, but it's Gibson's wonderfully colourful SF setting that makes this such a delight to read - the Golden Gate Bridge transformed into a shanty-town; a television worshipping Christian sect; a modern-day martyr responsible for a vaccination against AIDS; a world where the ubiquity of computer data transfer makes physical couriers important & reality TV producers have as much power as the police. An evocative look at a world close to our own but still startlingly different, 'Virtual Light's characters & setting are strong enough to triumph over a workmanlike plot.
NB: This novel stands well enough alone, but it is followed by two sequels: 'Idoru' & 'All Tomorrow's Parties'.
Rydell's Run - By: Stephen A. Haines, 31 Jan 2006 
Reading a Gibson novel is an act of faith. He weaves seemingly tenuous threads into a vivid plot. Don't expect to fully comprehend where you're going until you're well into his story. Looking at the last pages doesn't help, either. Let him carry you through the story. It's worth the effort. Gibson's characterizations are peerless, even though so many of his people seem outlandish in our perception. His eye for the future is unmatched. Harlan Ellison's dictum that "SF" means "speculative fiction" & not "science fiction" finds its greatest expression in Gibson's works. This book, which became the introduction to a trilogy, is a fine example of alll these elements.
Berry Rydell was a Tennessee copper. Caught up in bizarre circumstances while "protecting the public," he becomes a Cop In Trouble. If policemen today think "political correctness" has impaired their effectiveness, wait until they see the future Gibson has in store for them. Lawsuits resulting from law enforcement activities are rampant. But the police have support. It comes from media producers who see enhanced viewer capture in publicizing these cases. Who but Gibson could view the corporate mentality with such perception? By the time of this story, corporate America has built up such a web of interfaces between themselves & the world it becomes impossible to extricate them. Rydell views video screens with the question "Woman or machine?" arising with distressing frequency. Driven from the police force, Rydell takes up with a security firm & relocated to Los Angeles. It's a drasticallly different world compared to Knoxville, but he hasn't seen anything yet. Before long he's in San Francisco, then off to Texas. Beyond mere survival, which is increasingly problematic, he's seeking a piece of advanced technology - the virtual light glasses. Gibson doesn't dwell on the technology behind this device. He's more concerned with the forces surrounding its possessor. Why do the questors go to such extremities to recover these glasses? Rydell represents us alll. He remains honest while working among those clearly outside the law. But it isn't the individuals who bring such tension into Rydell's life. His stress is ultimately due to the hidden agencies with which he must deal. They are faceless & obscure. They impart information of vague worth with a deviousness a Delphic oracle would envy. He isn't even clear whether he's dealing with individuals or cabals. Lofty & condescending, they give him but little satisfaction & what's given is clearly on their terms alone.
It's these faceless entities that Gibson warns us of as he [and we] contemplate the future. Corporate operations are disappearing from view as their powers grow from local to global influence. They can tap growing information resources & their decisions, which impact our lives daily, are taken far removed from our scrutiny. Gibson uses Rydell to exhibit how helpless we're becoming in their grasp. Gibson shows they are subject to no accountability to law or popular review as they make "globalization" a new reality. We can only watch in awe as they form a new ruling class in world society. That Gibson can do this within the realm of captivating fiction garners our admiration. That this book begins a new trilogy commands us to follow where he leads. His view is far reaching & we are grateful he shares that vision with us. [stephen a. haines - Ottawa, Canada]
Average - By: Tom Douglas, 25 Feb 2004 
Virtual Light is set in a near future San Francisco & has an ordinary plot whereby someone gets hold of an item they shouldn't have, & people in power want it back.
In this case it is a pair of sunglasses that have the ability to display virtual light - an overlay on normal vision. Not that the sunglasses matter much, they just give an excuse for big people to chase the little people.
The story, you will gather, is nothing to get excited about, & you will find pacier & more gripping thrillers elsewhere.
What rescues it as a novel is Gibson's vision of the future - not the science, but the society. Power is held by the Corporates, society is fragmented & many people have falllen through the cracks into a sub-culture.
It is close enough to the present to be believable, & Gibson provides vivid descriptions to help you visualise this fractured future.
I shame then, that the story itself isn't very good.
Three stars.
Virtual Light - Virtually Perfect - By: The Marquis de Carabas, 15 Aug 2003 
Set in a future that is as close as this afternoon, this is a book that shows why Gibson is one of the masters of speculative fiction. The story is tight, fast paced & full of the little details that Gibson does so well. If you have read Gibson before & liked it, you'll want to read this. If you haven't, this book is a great place to start.
A good book, bad place to start reading Gibson.... - By: , 16 May 2003 
Having read the other reviews of Virtual Light I felt it best to throw in my pennies worth. First, lets alll just agree that William Gibson is a great SF writer. NO, just agree, it'll be easier.
Lets also say that Virtual Light is not the best place to start. Most of his books are set in the same near-future setting, & interweave delicately with each other: part of the fun of reading a new Gibson novel is spotting the characters from previous works who occaisionallly pop their heads into the plot, either for a guest appearance or for a more starring role (anyone who's read them will remember Molly, in alll her incarnations, as being one of the most memorable...). But that's just the point. Unless you've read alll of them, starting at Virtual Light might be too much effort. Start at the beginning, with 'Neuromancer', which is, on it's own, both one of the finest cyberpunk novels ever written & the ideal starting point to get to grips with Gibson's writing style.
The first Gibson book I read was Virtual Light, & I have to agree with one of the other reviews here: at the time, it seemed rushed, too flaky, too insubstantial to take in. Then I read Neuromancer, realized they were something of a series, & got the lot. I have now read them alll, & while they do vary in content & quality, they alll have a particular fast-paced atmosphere that reveals him as an accomplished author. Virtual Light suffers in the same way as Count Zero: if read as part of the whole, they are each a wonderful, engaging dip into Gibson's intricate near future; strange, twisted tales of losers & winners wound round the plots & concepts that will draw fans in further & further...if read on their own, they may seem too distant, so take my advice & START AT THE BEGINNING!!!