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William Gibson, William Gibson: The Peripheral (2014, G.P. Putnam's Sons) 4 stars

Depending on her veteran brother's benefits in a city where jobs outside the drug trade …

Review of 'The Peripheral' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

This had been on the list for a re-read for a while. However, the news that a TV adaptation was about to land in October moved it to the top of the list.
I read this on release and my recollection of my impressions of this book were not positive. Yet again more evidence that past me was very different from now me. Maybe I was distracted or just not in a place to get this but it definitely resonated now.
Gibson is using the device of a future, parallel timeline that can interact with his primary timeline (in a very limited fashion) as a lens to explore the upcoming androgenic climate apocalypse. He calls it the 'jackpot' and posits that only the very rich, 'the klept' will survive.
As is usual with Gibson there is a lot going on here, too much to summarise in a small review. There is also that sense he always conveys of being about 5 minutes ahead of the zeitgeist.
A total banger of a book that set me up quite nicely for the upcoming TV show.