Jonas, Gerald. “The Disappearing $2,000 Book.”
New York Times 29 Aug. 1993: BR12.
A full-length discussion of the text including comments from Begos, Gibson and Ashbaugh. (more…)
New York Times 29 Aug. 1993: BR12.
A full-length discussion of the text including comments from Begos, Gibson and Ashbaugh. (more…)
Maclean’s June 5, 1995. Accessed 31 August 2005.
http://thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=
TCE&Params=M1ARTM0010426
Article offers straightforward biographical information about William Gibson. (more…)
OL3: open letter on lines online 2000. Retrieved 31 Aug. 2005. http://www.ubu.com/papers/ol/jirgens.html
Article references Agrippa in the context of digital publishing. (more…)
Rev. of All Tomorrow’s Parties, by William Gibson. Eye Weekly 2 Dec. 1999. Retrieved 31 Aug. 2005. http://www.eye.net/eye/issue/issue_12.02.99/arts/books.html
This review of Gibson’s All Tomorrow’s Parties also references Agrippa. (more…)
Rampike 11 22 Nov. 1999.
Interview with Gibson, with emphasis on Agrippa. (more…)
Rev. of Agrippa: A Book of the Dead, by William Gibson. New Scientist 20 Mar. 1993: 45.
Article offers a short review of Agrippa and its early transcription on the net. (more…)
Interview Jan. 1989: 86.
This article features an interview with William Gibson at the height of his cyberpunk fame. (more…)
Cambridge History of Twentieth-Century English Literature. Ed. Laura Marcus and Peter Nicholls. New York: Cambridge UP, 2004. 794-5.
This article offers an analysis of “Agrippa: A Book of the Dead” and considers it fully within the context of emerging literary trends. (more…)
Paradise Now: Picturing the Genetic Revolution. Retrieved 31 August 2005. http://www.genomicart.org/ashbaugh.htm
This site features an artistic statement by Dennis Ashbaugh, as well as an image his “genomic” artwork “Bio-Gel (aka The Jolly Green Giant).” (more…)
Rev. of Agrippa: A Book of the Dead, by William Gibson. Book Notes, New York Times 18 Nov. 1992: C26.
Short item in the Book Notes column of the Times about the book (“and the word is used in the loosest sense possible”) contemporary to its release. Includes a description of the book and Gibson’s scrolling poem based on announcements from, and an interview with, the publisher. (more…)