Count Zero - William Gibson

Count Zero

By William Gibson

  • Release Date: 1987-04-01
  • Genre: High Tech Sci-Fi
Score: 4.5
4.5
From 417 Ratings

William Gibson continues the visionary Sprawl Trilogy that began with Neuromancer in this frighteningly probable parable of the future.

A corporate mercenary wakes in a reconstructed body, a beautiful woman by his side. Then Hosaka Corporation reactivates him, for a mission more dangerous than the one he’s recovering from: to get a defecting chief of R&D—and the biochip he’s perfected—out intact. But this proves to be of supreme interest to certain other parties—some of whom aren’t remotely human....

Comments:

12 Comments
Taylor Mackenzie
Amazing! I love this site
Aston Ayers
Only Signup is easy and free, finally I can read this book Count Zero with good quality. Thank you!
Ashley Ann
Been waiting to download this book for months. and finally came out too
Cheryl Lynn
This book Count Zero is very nice, with quick read and download
Erin Cochran Cole
Great selection and quality is better than many Book Store, no kidding.
Kyle Magner
yes, i am also through this to download books
Eric Mn
Yes this really works! Just got my free account
Terry Barnes
One of the best book I've seen this year!
Pastor Shahuano
Excited, Happy Reading guys !!!
Laura Velez Garcia
Thanks, I'm so glad to be reading this book
Wouter van der Giessen
Laura Velez Garcia yes same me too
Janet McCann
Sign up was really easy. Less than 1 minute I was hooked up

Reviews

  • Faster Than The First

    4
    By kayleejm
    Still compelling, but paced more erratically than the first.
  • 100 Words or Less

    3
    By JRubino
    When reading Gibson, prepare yourself for complete confusion during the first 50 pages. Just accept it. With techno-babble, slang, half-filled descriptions … you’re going to be lost. Oh, it’s a good lost, but it’s still lost. However, once past that threshold, he does bring it all together. Suddenly the verbiage makes sense. The characters start congealing. Then it takes off with a rush. This novel works on that same level, though I felt the ending seemed stilted. The complicated build-up fell apart in the last 20 pages or so. That’s too bad. The middle part of this book is excellent.
  • Long time Gibson fan

    5
    By Aarphacker
    Neuromancer is the first book I purchased on my iPad. Seems only fair. It is unfortunate that Apple does not compete with Ono-Sendai in decks. Be prepared for superb descriptions of context and speculative fiction that has aged very gracefully over the years. In my opinion he is one of the greatest living fiction writers, but what does an old geek know! He also has an uncanny sense of the grit of technology, how it enrapts and enslaves simultaneously, weaving desirable dystopias. Gibson provides so much texture in his books and in his blogs and tweets. A blog he wrote hooked me on FieldNotes - best pencils in the world, though I will use them less with my iPad. This has become somewhat of a tradition for me, since when I purchased my nook I bought Neuromancer.