Episoder
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Welcome to the new episode of the Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with Jay Springett, writer, thinker, worldrunner, and podcaster. You can find him at his website, his Permanently Moved podcast, or on substack at Experience.Computer.
Today, we’re onto Pattern Recognition, the first novel in the Blue Ant Trilogy. We talk about the internet, Gibson’s career more broadly, and a host of other things. Here’s the interview with Gibson that Jay mentions as well.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Welcome to the new episode of the Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with Kelby Losack, writer, voice actor, carpenter, cover artist (he does all the covers for my Howl series), and cohost of the Agitator podcast with J David Osborne. He’s the author of the hillbilly cyberpunk masterpiece Mercy. Find more of him at his website.
Today, we’re onto All Tomorrow’s Parties, book three in William Gibson’s Bridge Trilogy. Once again, thirty years ago Gibson seemed to be writing a book about today, which is fascinating. Here we have a convergence of characters from the previous two novels and some iconic imagery to end out the trilogy.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Manglende episoder?
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Welcome to the new episode of the Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with Kelby Losack, writer, voice actor, carpenter, cover artist (he does all the covers for my Howl series), and cohost of the Agitator podcast with J David Osborne. He’s the author of the hillbilly cyberpunk masterpiece Mercy. Find more of him at his website.
Today, we’re onto Idoru, book two in William Gibson’s Bridge Trilogy. Rarely has a book felt more like it’s about the internet as we experience it today and so we talk a lot about the internet and social media on this one and how this novel probably makes more sense and is more relatable in 2024 than it was when it came out in 1996.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Welcome to the new episode of the Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with Kelby Losack, writer, voice actor, carpenter, cover artist (he does all the covers for my Howl series), and cohost of the Agitator podcast with J David Osborne. He’s the author of the hillbilly cyberpunk masterpiece Mercy. Find more of him at his website.
Today, we begin The Bridge Trilogy with 1993’s Virtual Light by William Gibson.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Welcome to the fourth Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with the one and only David Simmons, author of Ghosts of East Baltimore and Ghosts of West Baltimore, and we’re talking about the 1995 movie adaptation of William Gibson’s 1981 short story of the same name.
This is a funny one.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Welcome to the fourth Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with Jayson Young from the Mangaroos! It’s a great show where the hosts read the first issue of a manga in Japanese and then discuss it in English. Check it out!
We’re talking William Gibson’s Burning Chrome, his short story collection. There are some intersections between some of these stories and the Sprawl Trilogy I previously discussed. The collection is…well, not our favorite! Let’s just leave it at that for now.
We discuss our various issues with Gibson’s stories and his writing while also discussing some of the strengths.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Welcome to the third Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with J David Osborne, the Founder of Broken River Books. Find him at his substack The Broken River Writers' Collective and on tiktok at @brbjdo. He’s also the author of a number of books, including the cyberpunk series Gods Fare No Better. One of my favorite writers and a long time friend.
We’re talking William Gibson’s Mona Lisa Overdrive, the final book in the Sprawl trilogy. It functions as a sequel to both Neuromancer and Count Zero, picking up characters from both and throwing them into a narrative together. We have a lot to say about this one, and especially the ways it fails to deliver. We also take this time to discuss the trilogy as a whole and Gibson’s impact on science fiction.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Welcome to the second Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with J David Osborne, the Founder of Broken River Books. Find him at his substack The Broken River Writers' Collective and on tiktok at @brbjdo. He’s also the author of a number of books, including the cyberpunk series Gods Fare No Better. One of my favorite writers and a long time friend.
We’re talking William Gibson’s Count Zero, which is the sequel to Neuromancer and, I think, a much better novel. We run through this bad boy and find things to love and hate and ways it interacts with the world we still live in.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe -
Welcome to the inaugural Wolf Podcast.
Today I’m talking with J David Osborne, the Founder of Broken River Books. Find him at his substack The Broken River Writers' Collective and on tiktok at @brbjdo. He’s also the author of a number of books, including the cyberpunk series Gods Fare No Better. One of my favorite writers and a long time friend.
We’re talking William Gibson’s Neuromancer, one of the most important books of the late 20th century. Probably doesn’t even require an introduction. This is a book that I (in)famously dislike but came to appreciate more and more through our conversation.
Music by Bart Larsen. Everything else done by me, I guess.
Get full access to Wolf at radicaledward.substack.com/subscribe