William Gibson bibliography


The works of William Gibson encompass literature, journalism, acting, recitation, and performance art. Primarily renowned as a novelist and short fiction writer in the cyberpunk milieu, Gibson invented the metaphor of cyberspace in "Burning Chrome" and emerged from obscurity in 1984 with the publication of his debut novel Neuromancer. Gibson's early short fiction is recognized as cyberpunk's finest work, effectively renovating the science fiction genre which had been hitherto considered widely insignificant.
At the turn of the 1990s, after the completion of his Sprawl trilogy of novels, Gibson contributed the text to a number of performance art pieces and exhibitions, as well as writing lyrics for musicians Yellow Magic Orchestra and Debbie Harry. He wrote the critically acclaimed artist's book Agrippa (a book of the dead) in 1992 before co-authoring The Difference Engine, an alternate history novel that would become a central work of the steampunk genre. He then spent an unfruitful period as a Hollywood screenwriter, with few of his projects seeing the light of day and those that did being critically unsuccessful.
Although he had largely abandoned short fiction by the mid-1990s, Gibson returned to writing novels, completing his second trilogy, the Bridge trilogy at the close of the millennium. After writing two episodes of the television series The X-Files around this time, Gibson was featured as the subject of a documentary film, No Maps for These Territories, in 2000. Gibson has been invited to address the National Academy of Sciences and the Directors Guild of America and has had a plethora of articles published in outlets such as Wired, Rolling Stone and The New York Times. His third trilogy of novels, Pattern Recognition, Spook Country and Zero History have put Gibson's work onto mainstream bestseller lists for the first time.

Novels

Short fiction

Collected

Uncollected

  • "Tokyo Collage" in SF Eye, August 1988.
  • "Tokyo Suite" in Penthouse 1988/5-7. Early version of “Tokyo Collage”, translated by Hisashi Kuroma.
  • "The Smoke" in Mississippi Review 47/48, 1988.
  • "Hippy Hat Brain Parasite" in Shiner, Lewis, Modern Stories No. 1, April 1983. Republished in
  • "The Nazi Lawn Dwarf Murders"
  • "Doing Television" in
  • "Darwin" in The Face, March 1990, and Spin, April 1990, 21–23.
  • "Skinner's Room" in Republished in
  • "Academy Leader" in
  • "" in The Washington Post Book World, 1991-12-01. Republished in
  • "Where the Holograms Go" in
  • "Thirteen Views of a Cardboard City" in Republished in
  • "Dougal Discarnate" in

Excerpted

Mona Lisa Overdrive:

Screenplays

Johnny Mnemonic The X-Files:

Unrealized

Burning Chrome – adaptation of "Burning Chrome" Neuro-Hotel

Comics

  • William Gibson Archangel – 5-part comic with Michael St. John Smith and Butch Guice.
  • William Gibson's Alien 3 – 5-part comic with Johnnie Christmas and Tamra Bonvillain.

Non-fiction

Articles

Forewords, introductions and afterwords

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Screen appearances

Acting appearances

Wild Palms

Documentaries

No Maps for These Territories

Television appearances

Brave New Worlds: The Science Fiction Phenomenon Making of Johnny Mnemonic The X-Files Movie Special

Miscellanea

Count Zero shortened and bowdlerised serialization illustrated by J. K. Potter, Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, January, February, March 1986 issues