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Johnny Mnemonic

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Johnny is a courier. He carries other people's memories, millions of them, downloaded into his brain... Working out of Beijing, he is hired to carry a package to the States. The hundreds of gigabytes stashed in his head are far beyond his capacity, but as long as he gets downloaded quickly they won't do him any permanent harm...

But headaches are the least of Johnny's problems. The Americans aren't the only ones who want the data. The Yakuza are after Johnny too. Not all of him, though. All they need is his cryogenically frozen head...

In Johnny Mnemonic, the science-fiction guru of our age brings his acid-drenched tale of the near future to the screen for the first time. Containing William Gibson's original short story, his full script and exclusive stills from the film, this classic of the cyberpunk era expresses the unique vision of the author who was the first to see his way into tomorrow...

160 pages, Hardcover

First published May 1, 1981

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About the author

William Gibson

226 books13.6k followers
Librarian Note: There is more than one author in the Goodreads database with this name. See this thread for more information.

William Ford Gibson is an American-Canadian writer who has been called the father of the cyberpunk subgenre of science fiction, having coined the term cyberspace in 1982 and popularized it in his first novel, Neuromancer (1984), which has sold more than 6.5 million copies worldwide.

While his early writing took the form of short stories, Gibson has since written nine critically acclaimed novels (one in collaboration), contributed articles to several major publications, and has collaborated extensively with performance artists, filmmakers and musicians. His thought has been cited as an influence on science fiction authors, academia, cyberculture, and technology.


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William Gibson. (2007, October 17). In Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia. Retrieved 20:30, October 19, 2007, from http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?t...

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 174 reviews
Profile Image for Erich Franz Linner-Guzmann.
98 reviews82 followers
March 20, 2012
"I put the shotgun in an Adidas bag and padded it out with four pairs of tennis socks, not my style at all, but that was what I was aiming for: If they think you're crude, go technical; if they think you're technical, go crude. I'm a very technical boy. So I decided to get as crude as possible. These days, though, you have to be pretty technical before you can even aspire to crudeness. I'd had to turn both those twelve-gauge shells from brass stock, on the lathe, and then load then myself; I'd had to dig up an old microfiche with instructions for hand-loading cartridges; I'd had to build a lever-action press to seat the primers―all very tricky. But I knew they'd work."


This is 1981 William Gibson cyberpunk! This short story even predates his Sprawl trilogy of novels and it has so much of what is to come of his writing's just packed into a single short story, called "Johnny Mnemonic". It has tech—action and Johnny; who just so happen to be junkies (in the technical scene) and just as crazy or crazier as he his.
Johnny eventually has to go to his friend Jones who is a very intelligent retired "navy dolphin" (yeah, an-actual dolphin), that is called a "SQUID". Jones is hooked on some hardcore drugs; which he developed more than just a habit for during a war that he was used in while he was in the navy. This story also introduces the character Molly, who plays a prominent role in Gibson's Sprawl trilogy of novels. Johnny Mnemonic the protagonist is a data trafficker. He has had cybernetic surgery to have a data storage system implanted in his head and allows him to store digital data too sensitive to risk transmission on computer networks. This is an amazing idea especially knowing that it was written in 1981, before they even had these micro memory chips!


"With Jones to help me figure things out, I'm getting to be the most technical boy in town."
Profile Image for Michael Fierce.
334 reviews23 followers
September 28, 2015
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Somewhere between 3 1/2 & 4 stars.

First off, as I'm sure most know, this book (& movie) are based on the short story, Johnny Mnemonic , by cyberpunk author, William Gibson .

I have never read the short story, though I plan to, of course.

If you haven't seen the movie, I'm not sure if you should. The acting is horrendous, the costumes are laughable, the dialogue, horrible. I guess if you like 80's films enough you might get a little heart flutter kick out of it but otherwise it is pretty bad. Don't axe me why but I've seen it like 3 or 4 times over the years and just watched it today right before this review, right after finishing the book.

I will say that the book is at least 320 gigabytes better than the movie!
  description
Terry Bisson did a fine job trying to take the script by William Gibson and inject some energy in it to match the movie IF the movie had've turned out as good as...let's say, Blade Runner (written by Philip K. Dick , directed by Ridley Scott ) or even Strange Days (written by James Cameron , directed by Kathryn Bigelow ).

Too bad the movie wasn't as good as those. It would've been awesome, if so!

Personally, I'd like to see the movie remade with a better script (by someone other than William Gibson ) and more importantly, by a director with a better vision.
  description

The book is fast-paced, hard to put down and pretty good.

Johnny is a mnemonic courier, who has a data storage device implanted in his head, so he is able to carry around large gigabytes of information not safe enough to upload into cyberspace (the internet). He is a mostly likable guy who hooks up with Jane, who suffers from a cybernetic disease called Nerve Attenuation Syndrome aka NAS, the symptoms of which cause "the black shakes", which Wiki states is caused by an overexposure to electromagnetic radiation from omnipresent technological devices, and is presented as a raging epidemic affecting the world in the future.
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Johnny needs to get the info out immediately or the data will seep out and kill him long before he even has a chance to be inflicted by NAS. Jane is going to help him. For a price, of course. Several factions, including the Yakuza mafia, are hellbent on obtaining the data, not hesitating for a moment, if that means chopping off Johnny's head to get to it.
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Here's the synopsis from the back of the DVD.
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And here's the description from the back of the ORIGINAL short story, with one noticeable difference: in the film he only has 24 hours - not 48 - to get the data out of his head.
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*Also, anyone planning to read this novelization may be glad to know the book does not star either Dolph Lundgren or Ice-T (or Canoe Reeves , for that matter) ~ Sometimes I just wanted to reach into the screen and strangle the characters.
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Can't wait to read the original story which can be found in Burning Chrome and Cyberpunk: Stories of Hardware, Software, Wetware, Evolution, and Revolution , as well as a few other anthology collections.

**The world itself reminded me most of the world in Destroying Angel by Richard Paul Russo . You can read my review of Destroying Angel here.

If you like this sort of thing, check out my shelf: he-say-you-bwade-wunnah .
  description
Profile Image for Shauny_32.
114 reviews10 followers
December 4, 2023
I can see why this is influential to Cyberpunk but it didn’t really do much for me. A story about cyborgs, the value of information and a future with the Yakuza dominating the criminal underground sounds better than it is. If it was a little less messy and more coherent I would probably rate it higher but as it stands it’s mostly just a curiosity.
Profile Image for Timothy.
26 reviews6 followers
October 4, 2007
I believe this title is available in Burning Chrome as a short story... This edition shown here contains the short story, some pictures from the movie, and the original movie script.

Though I love the short story with a passion the movie was sadly lacking... Though when I met Gibson at a signing he was excited to see this edition!
Profile Image for Jacob Kelly.
239 reviews3 followers
October 1, 2022
"I put the shotgun in my addidas bag and padded it out with four pairs of tennis socks, not my style at all but that was what I was aiming for: if they think you're crude go technical. If they think you're technical go crude. I'm a very technical boy. So I decided to get as crude as possible"

One of my favourite opening lines to any book ever. God I love the Gibson. Soon as he starts mentioning data and Megabytes I'm like right get my sunnies, get the long coat, Alexa play Juno Reactor. We're jacking in!
Profile Image for Andrew.
2,309 reviews
April 16, 2021
I have to say that this is a strange little book - the story Johnny Mnemonic is actaully a short story only a few dozen pages long - this is more of a film tie in book.

The book itself contains the screen play to the film and is set out as such we a few colour photos strategically taken from the film (really to spotlight the characters and certainly does not give anything away from the film). So as you can imagine is very much a book with a specific purpose to promote and support the film.

It does also contain a copy of the original story - which I think without giving away any spoilers is significantly different to the film. Now I could go in the importance of the story or the reception of the film (and some of he urban legends that arose from it) but I think for me I will always focus on the fact that both were the result of a cultural and technological shift (after all the film makes reference to VHS - I wonder how many people out there know let alone remember these devices).

I think any story that reflects on near future technological changes is either very bold or likes a gamble as just as easily you can ride the wave of popular recognition you can also be consigned to ignobility (after all where have all the 3D TVs gone) - which is rather intriguing as I think the film went one way while the story went the other.
January 6, 2024
Johnny Mnemonic is a placeholder of interesting ideas that weren't given a decent realisation. A tale with a chain of events happening simply for the sake of happening (take, for instance, Molly, who shows up and starts following Johnny for no apparent reason). A story with the protagonist serving a role of an empty vessel (both figuratively and literally), who is only there to tell a story--a cameraman, if you will. I don't find him enjoyable, nor do I wish to sympathise with him. I just don't care.

The dolphin was funny, though.
Profile Image for Lannie.
235 reviews7 followers
January 6, 2024
The pun-maker in me wants to say that it's not very memorable, but look, it's extremely memorable. It has a cyborg dolphin. It has a human SD card. The issue is that it's not actually that interesting.
Profile Image for Dario Andrade.
579 reviews19 followers
June 17, 2018
O William Gibson é um dos fundadores do Cyberpunk, a corrente de ficção científica surgida na virada da década de 1970 para a de 1980. Esse Johnny Mnemonic foi publicado originalmente em 1981 na falecida revista americana Omni e ficou mais conhecido pelo filme (cujo roteiro também foi escrito pelo Gibson) de 1995, estrelado pelo Keanu Reeves.
Aqui no Brasil foi publicado como um encarte da defunta (e interessante) revista General, em 1995.
É um dos primeiros contos do Gibson, sendo anterior ao seu livro mais conhecido e seminal, Neuromancer, de 1984.
Nesse conto já é possível encontrar os elementos que serão parte do repertório do Gibson. Uma linguagem rebuscada, muito imagética, algo confusa em alguns (ou muitos) momentos, acelerada, pós-moderna, também cheia dos tiques de uma linguagem acadêmica típica das décadas de 1970 e 1980 (e em alguma medida até hoje) em que se vislumbra uma pós-modernidade (ou hipermodernidade) pós-humana, em que as pessoas estão integradas, ou melhor, são parte máquina, parte modificação biológica, mas em que o ambiente está decadente, a economia é dominada pelas grandes corporações e apesar disso é também algo pós-capitalista (seja lá o que isso for), profundamente desigual, com uns pouquíssimos mega-ricos e uma multidão de pobres, que são estão deslocados no mundo, em que as instituições tradicionais – família e estado, por exemplo ¬– faliram.
Enfim, Gibson é um autor com muitas ideias – e o cyberpunk, por consequência – também. Mas a leitura do texto acaba por ter um certo estranhamento. Em alguns momentos, tudo parece meio ultrapassado. Em outros, porém, parece algo intensamente vívido. O conto começa lindamente: “Meti o rifle dentro da sacola Adidas e forrei tudo com quatro pares de meias para jogar tênis. Isso nem de longe faz meu estilo, mas era exatamente isso o que eu queria: se te acham grosseiro, seja técnico; se te acham técnico, seja grosseiro. Sou um rapaz muito técnico. Por isso decidi agir do modo mais grosseiro possível”. Depois, porém, Gibson vai se soltando e o texto vai ficando cada vez do tipo que a gente associa a ele. Aqui, um exemplo colhido ao acaso: “‘os dados são implantados através de uma série modificada de próteses contraautistas microcirúrgicas.’ Despejei uma versão sem graça do meu discurso de vendas padrão. ‘O código do cliente é armazenado em um chip especial que bloqueia as Lulas. Não há maneira de recuperar a frase código. Não há drogas ne cirurgia. Nem tortura. Eu não sei qual é a frase. Nunca soube.’”.
Dá para perceber que o Gibson teve uma influência grande da literatura de vanguarda. Certamente ele leu muito Faulkner ou Joyce e todos os outros grandes da literatura moderna do século XX. E misturou tudo isso com ficção científica e literatura acadêmica pós-moderna.
Talvez seja essa a impressão que fica dessa releitura do conto, muita coisa soa datada, como um filme de ficção científica dos anos 80, enquanto outras parecem que foram escritas há meia-hora. Vale a pena, mas eu confesso que tenho grandes dificuldades de seguir o ritmo pilhado da literatura dele. Tenho vontade de reler o Neuromancer, talvez o faça no futuro.
Profile Image for Vesta Valeria.
89 reviews8 followers
September 13, 2022
Рецензия была написана: 19.06.2015

Даже не знаю, чего мне в итоге хотелось от этого рассказа. Сюжета, слога, необычных персонажей? Не всегда бывает так, что друзья советуют интересные и захватывающие книги, но почему-то мне казалось, что этот рассказ будет принадлежать к хорошим открытиям.

А случилось наоборот. Возможно, я не уделила должного внимания количеству переводов сего произведения, и выбрала не самый лучший из них. Но ни язык, ни слог написанного не заставляют должным образом вчитаться. Даже просто войти в ритм произведения, уже не говоря о живом включении в сюжет.

Еще одной проблемой стал сам мир, описанный в рассказе. Скорее даже, почти не описанный. Очень много мелочей, новых терминов, неизвестных изобретений, и все это почти не раскрывается автором. А даже если и раскрывается - представить то, о чем он толкует, крайне сложно. Даже само строение куполов и подвесных Площадок, где происходит ключевое действие, осталось некой загадкой.

Персонажи тоже не порадовали. Кажется, будто автор совершенно не трудился выписывать ни одного из них, даже главного героя. О действиях и поступках его помощников и противников иной раз тоже говорится очень смазано и непонятно. Нет живого представления, нет цельной картинки.

Такое чувство, что Гибсон в прошлом написал научно-фантастический роман, в котором подробно и обстоятельно раскрыл как этот мир, так и его героев. А, погодя, написал этот рассказ, будто альтернативную концовку. Кто знает, вдруг так и есть?

P.S. Фильм не смотрела, но почему-то мне кажется, что он будет более удачным. Можно будет хотя бы представить все происходящее в полной мере.
Profile Image for Steve .
61 reviews58 followers
September 14, 2011
This book is a much better read than Over The Top... And obviously a different genre (this being sci-fi, adventure, mystery). But I wouldn't give it '4 stars', '3.5' maybe...

I think the book reads much better than the movie shows. The book creates more intrigue, and even though it wasn't a 'great' read for me, it was a page turner.

Johnny Mnemonic is a data smuggler (he actually has a jack socket in the back of his neck... And, no, I'm not joking LMAO) in a futuristic Japan. But there are a number of good twists in this book, and a few good characters (one secondary female lead). It kind of covers some deeper areas as well, especially about the main character(s) and the way technology is developing.
The thing is; Johnny doesn't know what data he carries, a code is used by the buyer to download the info. Also, Johnny can only handle carrying so much data (very computerish), and he needed to lose something in order to have the space for data...

It's not a bad read.
Profile Image for Jane.
1,176 reviews1 follower
May 10, 2018
The book is really cyber punk, but since it's clear I'm not going to read cyber punk again, I don't want to add a shelf for it. Science fiction is sort of a category for this book, but it's far more general than cyber punk. The premise was interesting. information has to travel securely, so it's implanted into Johnny's prosthetic memory. Way too much data is downloaded...the techies who do this are crooks, and he is going to die if he doesn't get it out. I began to lose track of who Johnny could trust, who was an enemy, and who was a sort-of-enemy who might help him out. Zap, crash, filament swing...that was most of the screenplay, which forms the first half of the book. Never remembered who was who except of Johnny, Jane and Anna (Johnny's mother). Johnny has information that would change the course of a disease, but pharmacom would no longer be able to make money by treating, rather than curing it. A movie I never want to see.
Profile Image for Natalia Gladysheva.
130 reviews8 followers
October 30, 2019
Сюжетная основа для старого (сомнительного) фильма с Киану Ривзом оказалась коротеньким рассказом, который на русском, к тому же, серьезно контузило при переводе. Однако Гибсон даже в короткую форму напихал столько деталей фантастического будущего, что становится понятно, откуда вообще возникла идея это экранизировать — созданный им мир светится изнутри и переливается, как голографический стикер.
Profile Image for Alfaniel Aldavan.
49 reviews32 followers
September 19, 2013
The beginnings of cyberpunk.

I must have read more times this story. Its plot doesn't matter, it's all about the specifics of the characters and the world: the (post)apocalyptic embedding of technological or biological artifacts into the human or animal bodies.

Recommended for cyberpunk fans or anyone interested in another kind of apocalypse than mainstream.
Profile Image for Rolando S. Medeiros.
129 reviews5 followers
February 21, 2024
Mesmo quando se conhece pouquíssimo sobre a escrita do William Gibson (o meu caso), alguma coisa se sabe sobre a influência, afinal, é o criador de um gênero e de uma estética visual que permanece em alta (e tender a continuar) mesmo quarenta anos depois. Sincronicamente, quando eu escrevia essa resenha, a rede social fervilhava com uma nova animação da Netflix adaptando uma side-story do Cyberpunk 2077, jogo que bebe bastante deste conto aqui. Por exemplo, no jogo da CD PROJEKT, um conceito principal da trama do protagonista adapta o conto, e até o mesmo ator de uma antiga adaptação do mesmo (Keanu Reeves) foi utilizado.

Neon, megacorporações, chuva refletida nas cores cromáticas, tecnologias peculiares e avançadas, segregação social; quase tudo já enraizado no imaginário popular quando se toca no nome Cyberpunk já aparece de alguma maneira por aqui, en passant, já nas primeiras criações do autor.

E vai além: por exemplo, aqui tem o Jones, um Golfinho (veterano de guerra da Marinha) viciado em heroína que vive num tanque de madeira estreito e se comunica via painel de luzes de natal (pisca-piscas) reciclados. Sim. Um golfinho viciado em heroína. (Ele era utilizado pela marinha para desamar minas aquáticas…)

Ele é de longe o personagem mais marcante da narrativa, que é bem simples em questão de trama. O Johnny — o personagem principal —, em contrapartida, consegue ser mais desinteressante que alguns figurantes — há no bar, cenário principal da primeira parte, um Iggy Pop-esque de pele lisa, sintética e dentes podres; ou a dupla de mulheres porradeiras (uma, inclusive, transgênero) — que somem ou morrem em poucas páginas.

Não é do meu feitio um conto que se paute quase total e unicamente na exposição e descrição, onde o encadeamento narrativo consegue ser mais simples que a já batida estrutura de Jornada do herói; mas, é elogiável a maneira com que o Gibson abre a narrativa e imerge o leitor em um mundo único, antes inimaginável, e agora completamente coerente, em um exercício de livre imaginação afastado mais próximo da tecnologia, porém sem largar mão da construção de mundo herdada da fantasia.

Um exercício saudável a se fazer ao ler esta história, é constantemente se lembrar de que para quem leu na época, não havia nada como aquilo antes, o Gibson estava inserindo os leitores em um mundo totalmente novo, liquido e conceitual. E isso ele faz muito bem. Você lê a primeira página, e está lá o Cyberpunk que conhecemos, difícil até imaginar que ninguém houvesse feito antes. Soa natural, em consonância com o avanço tecnológico da sociedade; e isso não falo para diminuir, pelo contrário, é como disse um cientista famoso: "as verdades absolutas são perfeitamente fáceis e compreensíveis, depois de descobertas; o difícil é descobri-las."

**

Mesmo que as páginas seguintes fossem a mais pura porcaria (adianto, apesar da simplicidade, não são), o trabalho de inserção e cenarização — acrescenta-se, uma leve imersão — já é importantíssimo. Mesmo que o Gibson tivesse morrido após "dropar essa bomba", a raiz de tudo está aqui; e entrando num desses what ifs malucos, mesmo que Neuromancer não existisse depois depois daqui, nossa “linha temporal” não mudaria tanto, muitos viriam beber diretamente daqui, como o fez a CD PROJEKT, que espremeu até a última palavra dessas dezessete páginas aqui.

A exemplo da construção, uns excertos da primeira página (coloquem em mente, como disse, que isso aqui é praticamente a inauguração desse subgênero, e notem como ainda é próximo do que vemos atualmente no cinema ou nos jogos):

"Desci do metrô três estações adiante da plataforma mais próxima e voltei esse trecho na caminhada. Procedimento a prova de falhas. Chequei meu visual refletido no tapume cromado de um quiosque de café: rosto caucasóide básico com uma coleira de pêlo duro e escuro.

As meninas do Na Ponta da Faca curtem muito o Sony Mao e foi difícil convencê-las a não me implantarem olhos puxados. Minha fachada provavelmente não enganaria Ralfi, mas poderia me ajudar a chegar perto da mesa dele."


"O Drome tem um ambiente único e estreito com um bar ao fundo e mesinhas na lateral, carregado de cafetões, empresários de lutadores e uma sinistra variedade de traficantes.
As Cadelas Magnéticas tomavam conta da porta naquela noite e não me agradava a ideia de ter de passar por elas caso as coisas dessem errado e eu tivesse que fugir correndo. Elas tinham dois metros de altura e eram magras como cães galgos. Uma era branca; a outra, preta. À parte essa diferença, eram tão idênticas quanto possível ser com ajuda de cirurgia plástica. Amantes há anos, eram barra pesada quando o pau quebrava. Eu nunca me lembrava ao certo qual das duas tinha sido homem."


(...) Ralfi estava em sua mesa de sempre. Devia-me muita grana. Eu tinha centenas megabytes armazenados na cabeça no sistema idiota/sábio. Não tinha acesso a essas informações. Ralfi as tinha postas lá, mas não havia voltado para buscá-las. Só ele poderia recuperar os dados utilizando uma frase código. Já não sou barato, pra começo de conversa, e minha hora extra para armazenagem de dados é bem cara."


Eu dei uma volta, e não falei do Johnny, mas, resumidamente, ele é um traficante/contrabandista de memória: num mundo onde a informação em dados está sempre a mercê de ser facilmente quebrada e decodificada, Johnny, que não sabe o que armazena, e que só com uma senha do contratante é revelado (ele fica inconsciente nesse processo), faz-se útil.

A trama revolve-se em torno de um desses trabalhos que deu errado, Johnny pegou informações demais, e o contratante não veio retirar. Isso para o Johnny significa perigo, a sua memória (ou o que restou) começa a diluir-se no excesso de informações, ao ponto de esquecer quem é, e de ter lapsos de (ir)realidade; deve, portanto, imediatamente procurar o contratante e resolver isso de uma vez.

Molly Millions, apesar de "cool", é inserida de modo totalmente caótico na história, que combina com a função de sua personagem, mas não eleva muito a história; é ela que dá ação à história e carrega o Johnny literal e figuradamente, e é uma personagem central para os trabalhos seguintes do Gibson. É aqui que a vemos em ação pela primeira vez.

Outro ponto apenas suscitado aqui e bem explorado nas diversas adaptações desse subgênero, é a decadência camuflada pela alta tecnologia; aqui temos, por exemplo, o próprio painel de luzes de
natal recicladas do Jones, o grupo de revolucários LoTeks (lê-se, low-techs), a cidade deles, suspensa em vigas e cordas acima de Nightcity; a cirurgia plástica para adquirir o rosto de um famoso astro do rock, mas em compensação os dentes podres e decadentes; o Neon avariado de tiros, e a desistência das equipes de manutenção a continuar a repará-los; os arcos da cidade, consequentemente, cobertos de fuligem… Até o embate final, que da-se numa espécie de arena suspensa, que também é uma discoteca, para a diversão dos Lo-Teks.

Por fim, em aspectos literários, apesar de eu recomendar o conto, retirando os objetos (fictícios, fantasiosos) e fenômenos (idem), o que se tem é apenas descrição; quase como um passeio, uma noite em Nightcity, que retirando todo este caráter mencionado, influencial e inaugural, não tem muita potência; é o tipo de história que funciona só nas mãos de um escritor com um GRANDE domínio sob a linguagem, que não é o caso da maneira descritivista do Gibson.

A estrutura é bem bobinha, no entanto, quando a história é colocada numa coleção, ou situada num universo, reaparecendo em fragmentos, a exemplo do que ocorre aqui, até que torna-se interessante. Por exemplo, o final, quando o Johnny decide Enfim, é interessante, curtíssimo e vale a leitura.
Profile Image for Abraham Lewik.
189 reviews6 followers
April 18, 2018
There is a freely available online edition of the short story, as ot should be. However that edition had spelling mistakes, I should write inconsistent, that bugged me.

The story is thrilling, perhaps well described as 'John Wick, Data Courier'. It's all a little too lucky, and the fascinating world is exposed in an impromptu manner, making the murder an iceberg (short story sized) of exposition.
Profile Image for Fawaz Alotibe.
Author 8 books101 followers
February 4, 2024
اول مره اقرا هذا النوع من الخيال العلمي
فوضوي وغريب وممتع ولكن الترجمة لم تعطينا روح العمل الأصلي
Profile Image for حسام.
492 reviews18 followers
July 30, 2023
لماذا تلخيص شىء هو اصلا شبه ملخص وصغير من الاساس
Profile Image for jazthedigital.
84 reviews1 follower
July 11, 2022
On “Johnny Mnemonic”
William Gibson Short Story

Review by jazthedigital
Read 10-11.07.2022


It is a sci-if cyberpunk novel. A drama heist of sort. Where the valuable thing is mind bank with big (for a time, now It can be a little weird) files stashed inside. That contain mind scans of people. Information, memories.

Johnny Mnemonic is the narrator in a book. Just through his way of speaking, a cold methodical way of phrasing, that shows focus and some grimness to even the places and circumstances he describes to us. His wordplay has specific dim flow, but it doesn’t get dull in a slightest. It’s in part like a futuristic noir story. With a main character second-thinking his position, purpose and place.
I really like that aspect it smoothly introduces us to context of his whereabouts, shows a glimpse of futuristic world, while letting imagination run in whatever direction when visualising events in our minds. It is really skilful and focused with language.

Gibson has a spark in his craft.

We got a club, a gang war, Johnny knows people and people know him. He’s a part of larger word. We as readers jump into a chapter of his life and can know him just from his actions and thoughts. He’s fleshed-out and doesn’t need moulding or “finding himself” act. He’s going from place to place through a futuristic city, he gets into business and stumbles upon a cascade of cyber subcultures.

Implants are present, futuristic body modifications treated as something mundane partially tell us something about the world and people that have them.
Transhumanism is here.

I appreciate how Gibson plays with the space of a page, filling some of them partially with onomatopoeias, sounds of revving machines, working cybernetic individuals etc. It somehow provides more capturing tone and atmosphere, than just conventional “I heard this and this sound...” type presentation. It was a good decision.

I love how the narrative and Mnemonics inner monologues, observations hold a mundane quality to it. For us readers and more especially people that first read it in May 1981 it is weird world. Both alienating a bit as well as intriguing with its terms, people, rules.
For Mnemonic it is colourful everyday that he can bank on seeing something extraordinary or a job to pull-off with smuggling memories and data.
It’s a trip.

I love how calm it ends. We just see moments of a day in alien, advanced high-tech low-life society that Johnny Mnemonic is a part of.
Perfect.


As introduction to the vibe and some conventions, topical characteristic of the cyberpunk genre (at least when it was truly alive and purposefully commented culture) “Johnny Mnemonic” is a great, fast & adventurous read.
Gibson you’re a philosopher of futuristic fiction. Goddamn! You could cut a dense atmosphere of this book with knife if it materialised! Hell yeah! 🤘🏻

#truecyberpunk

5 out of 5 stars.
Profile Image for Curtis Runstedler.
121 reviews1 follower
April 21, 2016
What an engaging whirlwind of action and excitement! Great story, although I'm not sure why these cyberpunks would use human bodies to store information - too much of a liability, methinks. It's much clearer than the film, which isn't really as bad as everyone says (heck, it was pretty entertaining, even if it doesn't make much sense), although I can't help feeling that Gibson could unpack his ideas a bit more - there's definitely an in media res feeling here, but I wanted to know more about this world and how it works. I guess there's Neuromancer for that. The dialogue is sharp and snappy, and the writing is clean and direct. Lots of good action and ideas. Keen to read more!
Profile Image for Corey Dutson.
170 reviews19 followers
April 29, 2011
Well that was short. Going to have to pick up the movie adaptation (and watch the movie) to get a real feel for the story.

This version was swell, but not really more than a short story.
Profile Image for K. Anna Kraft.
1,132 reviews37 followers
July 16, 2016
Sooo, I arranged my thoughts into a haiku:

"Glitz and glamour names,
Chaos padding the plot,
While stifling gems."
Profile Image for Rawan Ali.
34 reviews2 followers
May 3, 2023
مدام الإنسان هيترجم عمل ليه ميكونش كامل؟!
ليه ألخص؟!
طب عرفني بالأحداث أو نبذة على الأقل
باللغة الأصلية هي ١٦٠ صفحة فهي مش محتاجة تلخيص اصلا😂
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