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Mona Lisa Overdrive is a science fiction novel by American-Canadian writer William Gibson, published in 1988. It is the final novel of the cyberpunk Sprawl trilogy , following Neuromancer and Count Zero , taking place eight years after the events of the latter.
The trilogy was commercially and critically successful. Steven Poole, writing in The Guardian, described "Neuromancer and the two novels which followed, Count Zero (1986) and the gorgeously titled Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988)" as making up "a fertile holy trinity, a sort of Chrome Koran (the name of one of Gibson's future rock bands) of ideas inviting endless reworkings".
Volume 2 of the Sprawl trilogy, Count Zero follows Neuromancer (1984), with the series being concluded by Mona Lisa Overdrive (1988). [1] It appeared in serial form in Isaac Asimov's Science Fiction Magazine, [3] in the January, February, and March 1986 issues (the January being the 100th of that magazine), [citation needed] where each part was accompanied by black and white art produced by J ...
After expanding on the story in Neuromancer with two more novels (Count Zero in 1986 and Mona Lisa Overdrive in 1988), thus completing the dystopic Sprawl trilogy, Gibson collaborated with Bruce Sterling on the alternate history novel The Difference Engine (1990), which became an important work of the science fiction subgenre known as steampunk.
Blaster Master: Overdrive: 2010: Wii: Re-imagining of the original game. [52] Blaster Master Zero: 2017: Nintendo Switch, Nintendo 3DS, Windows, PlayStation 4 [53] Blood: 1997 MS-DOS: Blood: Fresh Supply: 2019 Windows: Support for higher resolutions, graphical features such as anti-aliasing, ambient occlusion, v-sync and unlocked FPS, and ...
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Often, in a trilogy, the first film will be made on its own, and if it is a success, the remaining two parts will be produced back-to-back. This approach was pioneered by the second and third parts of the Sleepaway Camp trilogy, and has since been applied to the Back to the Future and The Matrix trilogies.
Burning Chrome (1986) is a collection of short stories written by William Gibson. [1] [2] Three of the stories take place in Gibson's Sprawl, a shared setting for most of his early cyberpunk work.