All Tomorrow's Parties (novel)

All Tomorrow's Parties (novel)

All Tomorrow's Parties is the final novel in William Gibson's Bridge trilogy. Like its predecessors, All Tomorrow's Parties is a speculative fiction novel set in a postmodern, dystopian, postcyberpunk future. The novel borrows its title from a song by Velvet Underground. It is written in the third-person and deals with Gibsonian themes of emergent technology.

Read more about All Tomorrow's Parties (novel):  Plot Summary, Characters, Major Themes, Literary Significance and Reception

Famous quotes containing the words tomorrow and/or parties:

    Early education can only promise to help make the third and fourth and fifth years of life good ones. It cannot insure without fail that any tomorrow will be successful. Nothing “fixes” a child for life, no matter what happens next. But exciting, pleasing early experiences are seldom sloughed off. They go with the child, on into first grade, on into the child’s long life ahead.
    James L. Hymes, Jr. (20th century)

    Remorse—is Memory—awake—
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    A Presence of Departed Acts—
    At window—and at Door—
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