Virtual Light
Virtual Light is a 1993 novel by the American-Canadian writer William Gibson. First published by Bantam Books, it is the first volume in Gibson's Bridge trilogy. Set in a near-future California, the novel takes place after an earthquake has damaged the San Francisco-Oakland Bay Bridge and turned it into an improvised settlement known as the Bridge.
The novel follows Chevette Washington, a bicycle messenger who steals a pair of virtual light glasses without realizing that they contain valuable concealed data, and Berry Rydell, a former police officer who becomes drawn into the attempt to recover them. Their intersecting pursuit brings together private security interests, violent intermediaries, and the Bridge community, linking the device to plans for a redeveloped San Francisco.
Critics and scholars have treated Virtual Light as a transitional work in Gibson's fiction, emphasizing its shift from the cyberspace-oriented mode of his earlier novels toward a more material and urban setting. Discussion of the novel has often focused on surveillance, redevelopment, and the tension between privatized urban order and the improvised social space of the Bridge. The novel was a finalist for the 1994 Hugo Award for Best Novel and placed fourth in the 1994 Locus poll for best science fiction novel.
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