William Gibson's Neuromancer: The Graphic Novel Volume 1

Front Cover
Epic Comics, 1989 - Comics & Graphic Novels - 48 pages
"Cyberspace was the last frontier. The bright, intermeshing lattices of data in the world's massive computer networks were waiting to be plundered. Case was twenty-four. At twenty-two, he'd been an interface cowboy, one of the best computer jocks in the urban Sprawl that stretched down North America's east coast. A thief, he'd worked for thieves, jacked into a computer deck that projected his disembodied consciousness into the matrix of the world's computer networks. He stole secrets from corporate computers, selling them to the highest bidder. Then, as most thieves do, he made a classic mistake. He stole from his employers. He'd expected to die, but they only smiled. They burnt out his nervous system instead, so he'd never experience the matrix again. Until Molly offered him his last chance. Black market doctors would fix him up, if in return he'd make what might be his last desperate run."--Cover.

About the author (1989)

Tom De Haven is the author of several novels, including Derby Dugan's Depression Funnies (winner of the 1997 American Book Award) and Funny Papers. A frequent contributor to Entertainment Weekly and The New York Times, he also teaches at Virginia Commonwealth University and is a licensed private investigator. He lives in Midlothian, Va.