Michael Tree said:
As for comparing it to other Gibson novels, if you read other novels of his and liked them, then you almost certainly went into reading Pattern Recognition with certain preconceptions and expectations of quality, even if you didn't consciously compare them.
I'll grant you that. I'm not saying I didn't compare this to other Gibson works, or that I had expectations based upon other novels of his. I am saying that I wouldn't rate this in the "good for a first novel" category.
I really enjoyed the concepts, the characters were intriguing, and as was said on this thread before, the online community angle was very relevant. I just don't think that Gibson actually
finished the story. I'll continue to believe (because it makes me think that Gibson hasn't lost the edge and will come out with better works in the future) that for some reason, he was rushed to finish the book. Don't know what it could have been. Deadline? Other projects that he had committed to? Not sure, but it makes me feel better to think that this wasn't the best he could have done given no outside pressures.
I also don't think that enjoying a writers previous works makes you
more critical of the current work. If anything, I was predisposed to like this book given positive previous reads of Gibson. I was certainly more willing to cut him some slack than I was when reading
Dragondoom (see link in sig for discussion), which was (for me) an unknown author.
Gibson is one of those authors who shows incredible flashes of brilliance at times. And before this book, hadn't written anything I wouldn't consider good. But this one.... Well, it just don't seem done.