Reviews

Quemando Cromo by William Gibson

toc's review against another edition

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4.0

Every decade or so I find myself rereading Gibson's original cyberpunk work. It's always immensely enjoyable and satisfying to do so. I include Burning Chrome because it seems like a nice way to end the trilogy.

tyson55's review against another edition

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challenging mysterious fast-paced

3.0

rho21's review against another edition

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Wasnt in the mood for a collection of stories.

jaminup's review against another edition

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4.0

Rounded down from 4.5 stars

Fantastic collection of (mostly) cyberpunk from one of the masters of the genre. You can really see Gibson developing a lot of the foundations of the genre here in a variety of different stories. Individual story ratings below.

Johnny Mnemonic: 4/5

The Gernsback Continuum: 2/5

Fragments of a Hologram Rose: 3.5/5

The Belonging Kind: 3/5

Hinterlands: 5/5

Red Star, Winter Orbit: 5/5

New Rose Hotel: 4/5

The Winter Market: 4/5

Dogfight: 5/5

Burning Chrome: 4.5/5

tizianabooks's review against another edition

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3.0

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Personalmente non sono una grandissima fan dei racconti – ho sempre avuto l’impressione, con tutti gli autori, di uscire dalla storia proprio sul più bello e, generalmente, sono più da romanzo – ma ho voluto ugualmente parlarvi di questa raccolta nel caso in cui qualcuno volesse avvicinarsi al genere Cyberpunk (o fosse solo curios* di vedere di che si tratta) e non volesse prendersi l’impegno di leggersi una trama di 300 e passa pagine.

Con questi racconti, più che ai personaggi, ci si può affezionare al mondo che ruota attorno a loro – un mondo fatto di tecnologia invadente, di protesi robotiche che vanno oltre il semplice sostituire un arto mancante, di modifiche del corpo che avvicinano pericolosamente l’umano al cyborg, e più in generale del “feel” cyberpunk - quello in cui tutto è permesso, moralmente parlando, perché fisicamente lo è. Quello in cui molto spesso si perde quel confine tra macchina e umano e ci si chiede cosa renda l’umano tale, visto che esistono intelligenze artificiali che a tratti sembrano indistinguibili da quello che imitano.

Il ritmo della narrazione di Gibson è sempre ansioso, sempre frammentato, esattamente come è il mondo Cyberpunk dove tutto è velocissimo, dove puoi rischiare la vita da un secondo all’altro – e se si entra nell’ordine di idee di questo universo, risulta piacevole. Sa creare attimi di tensione, come sa anche narrare un mondo pezzo per pezzo.
Se si vuole vedere cos’è il cyberpunk, questo è un buon libro da cui iniziare.

jbkep's review against another edition

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3.0

It's always hard to judge a short story collection. I really liked some for either having great story telling ("Dogfights"), or making you think ("The Hinterlands"). Others I didn't enjoy as much for coming off as too abstract or 'artsy' ("Dreams of a Holographic Rose"). Overall, it is a good example of Gibson's work, but as with any collection of short stories, don't expect yourself to love every one in the book.

harrysmallwood's review against another edition

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dark tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot

3.5

empoi's review against another edition

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4.5

A series of short stories that all carry the same feel as neuromancer. Specially the first and last story, Johnny Mnonic and Burning Chrome feel like they embody the genre of cyberpunk. 

bergsteiger's review against another edition

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2.0

I have always been reluctant to pick Gibson up again. I had to read Neuromancer for a college course and I was bored to tears by it. He was the rave back then, but I just couldn't get see it. Fast forward 30 years and someone recommends to me Burning Chrome.

Burning Chrome is a selection of short stories. Most of them follow a basic outline. Some sort of job/caper, enter femme fatale, flashbacks, job goes awry in some fashion usually related to femme fatale. A lot of these read like an unpolished, ragged Richard K. Morgan.

I just finished this book last night and the only stories that I can recall in any detail were the opener "Johnny Mnemonic" which followed his standard cyberpunk trope, but had a little more flavor to it (the story had a junkie war dolphin - I mean that's kinda cool). The other story that stood out was one one that had a co-author and was called "The Belonging Kind". It wasn't great, but it was centered around an interesting idea, so it stuck with me.

But overall...big bust. Pretty sure this will be my last attempt at reading Gibson. Simply being an early pioneer in cyberpunk (his claim to fame), doesn't mean he is an entertaining author. I will admit, that I generally feel like this genre is about the "vibe" of the stories and less about content/quality, so I have some of my own internal biases when reading anything labeled cyberpunk, but at the end of the day it would just be hard to recommend this book to most people.

infantile_decorum's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark mysterious medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? N/A
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75