They'll fall in line, they always do. There is no bottom.
lerky
Always interested in books with trans/enby characters (well... that aren't the tired serial killer/etc. demonization), will check those out!
I don't so much mind if a modern writer is doing a throwback to 1980s retro-futurism so long as it's still an intriguing story. That's all part of my curiosity of what cyberpunk would even be nowadays. Though from other posts it seems like if my goal is to find the cyberpunk equivalent (i.e. the reaction to our current situation) something akin to "solar-punk" would be more applicable. But that's a rabbit hole I'll dive into later. One obsession at a time!
Glad to hear about Gibson's later work. I had actually stared with his short story collection "Burning Chrome" but even in the forward he admits it's basically trash and only kept around for the sake of it. I read through a few stories but got itchy for "Neuromancer". I'll keep pushing through... the bones (and historical significance for the genre) of it are intriguing after all, even if some of the proverbial meat is a bit off.
And my post on !cyberpunk@lemmy.zip did indeed go through at the time, but I deleted it prior to deleting the account since I wouldn't have been able to reply (that was part of what was so busted with the piefed side of things). It was more a question about the difficulties I had with "Neuromancer" itself anyways, with the subject of contemporary writers being an aside. I'll certainly visit in the future since I expect I'll be in this cyberpunk hole quite awhile yet.
Heh, yeah I'm in hyper-fixation mode at the moment so it's just mountains of magpied cyberpunk books, games, etc. for my forseeable future... or until I burnout/something shiny catches my attention.
A trans protagonist definitely has me sold, though detective-wise it depends on whether it's just functioning as pro-cop propaganda.
Ah, that's kind of what I gathered it would be but wasn't sure. I may still take a gander out of curiosity, but I've spent too many decades playing games as it is so I'm not sure I'd get much from reading about characters doing the same inane tasks. Barring some outstanding story that just uses it more as flavor/set-dressing, that is.
Added, thanks! "Modern day dystopian sci-fi" may as well be a cyberpunk tagline at this point.
I guess I didn't think of solar-punk as a book genre to explore. The context I've always seen it is very much in-life non-fiction (ala the various solar-punk communities on the threadiverse). Somehow it didn't occur to me that there would be literature as well.
I'll have to poke around. Thanks for the info!
"How has cyberpunk been updated for the modern era" is indeed what I'm ultimately asking about. I figured there would be a chance that the genre wasn't everlasting and that modern takes would either ultimately be throwback fanservice, or something so wildly different that it couldn't even be considered cyberpunk anymore... but that's why I asked.
I had Gibson's and Morgan's works in my list already, though I'm definitely going to have to bump "Altered Carbon" up given your recommendation. Does Gibson's style differ in "The Peripheral" compared to "Neuromancer" though? I'm currently reading the latter but not having the best time with his style/flow so far and am unsure if that's just him, or the book/Sprawl series... or me, for that matter.
Oh and I had originally posted a more long-winded version of the OP in !cyberpunk@lemmy.zip but it was with my now-deleted piefed account that was just too buggy to keep using. Given how book-specific the ask was I figured here was probably a better fit.
A downed internet definitely seems like an intriguing direction to explore, added to my queue!
Currently playing through the game so probably best I wait. The titles of a few seems like spoilers may be possible, though presumably most are unrelated-but-still-in-universe stories like the animated Edgerunners show? Or are some of them actually intended (i.e. prequel supplements) to read before the game?
Sounds like good ol' too-good-to-be-true honeytrappery to me, but that's pure knee-jerk speculation on my part. Army+Palantir = massive alarm bells in my book, and Proton has a growing number of issues that have tainted their reputation.
I also don't know how it would even be possible to legally operate a privacy-centric carrier in the US given the requirements of the Patriot Act/etc. To say nothing of how deeply intertwined they all are with alphabet agencies and data brokers.
At the very least I'd use extreme caution and operate under the assumption that they're not being 100% truthful.