The Walkman [The man, in late middle-age, gazes wistfully upon his collection of aging electronics and realizes, far too late, that all these treasures are as e-waste next to her Walkman, that he discarded without a second thought, so long ago.] I have of late been touched by the old melancholy. It manifests in all the usual ways: lassitude; sleeping long, and waking up tired; an inability to focus or concentrate. Such feelings are not unknown to me, particularly in the autumn when days grow short, the world grows cold, and the trees loom skeletal against the darkening sky. But it has been a long while since I felt the "black dog" (as it is sometimes called) as such a palpable presence. At the same time, if you can forgive the bathos, I have out of seemingly nowhere developed a remarkable and hopefully short-lived fixation on the author William Gibson. To be sure, I have long enjoyed his work. Since before the publication of Neuromancer in fact; ever since a friend loaned me her copies of "Burning Chrome," "Johnny Mnemonic," and "Fragments of a Hologram Rose" back in '82. For years afterward I would read every new book as soon as it appeared in paperback, anyway until "Spook Country", which kind of lost me. I began again with "The Peripheral" and "Agency", and sincerely hope he finishes "Jackpot" one day. But I have never been what you might call a Gibson fan, which is to say someone interested as much in Gibson the man (or at least, the public persona) as in his fiction. My friend once told me the broad outlines of his biography, but I had little interest in learning more. At least until last month, when I began somewhat obsessively tracking down recordings of old interviews at the Internet Archive and elsewhere, watched "No Maps For These Territories" in its entirety, read my way through "Conversations with William Gibson", and even downloaded copies of "Genre Plat," a science fiction fanzine he co-edited with Allyn Cadogan and Susan Wood back in the late 1970s. I am at a loss to explain it, except perhaps as a bout of nostalgia occasioned by the sudden and puzzling melancholy preceding my newfound fixation. Nostalgia, because there was a time in my life when Gibson was indeed a figure of some interest, not as a celebrity (because he was not much of one, back then), but simply as the friend of a friend. The same friend who loaned me her copies of Gibson's short stories, and who I will call Rikki, because she was the real life person on whom the character "Rikki Wildside" was based, in Gibson's short story "Burning Chrome". When I read that story now I see a portrait of Rikki as she was at a particular and fleeting moment in time, and so recapture, however briefly, a fragment of my own past life. Nostalgia aside, my deep dive into Gibsonalia had one rather unexpected result, a realisation that briefly and unknowingly, I once had custody of one of the foundational artifacts of cyberpunk. In interview after interview, Gibson iterates over the same biographical details, and in the various tellings and retellings of his story some details emerge, through repetition, as truly important. One of these is the role the Sony Walkman played in the development of cyberpunk. An account published in the New York Times[1] is typical, although perhaps more detailed than most. After waxing lyrical about the "revolutionary intimacy" of the Walkman interface, Gibson says "his conception of cyberspace [...] arose after he saw a bus-stop poster for the Apple IIc that showed only the machine's CPU and keyboard, not its monitor [...] 'I thought, if there is an imaginary point of convergence where the information this machine handles could be accessed with the under-the-skin intimacy of the Walkman, what would that be like?'" [2] Which led me to recall, with a sinking feeling that did nothing to allay the melancholy that had brought me to this point, that once long ago Rikki had given me her old Walkman. It was a model WM-1 with orange headphones, that (I'm fairly sure) William Gibson had sometime previously given to her and which was almost certainly the selfsame Walkman he talked about in all of those interviews. Why she made me a gift of it I can no longer recall, but probably just because she thought I might like it. She was kind that way. And like it I did, wandering around the city with my own personal soundtrack until, a few weeks later, it stopped working. And a while after that, I threw it away. And sometimes late at night, I'll be on eBay browsing thumbnails of overpriced Walkman relics, identical in every respect to Rikki's Walkman, but none of them ever are the same. 1. Headlam, Bruce. Walkman Sounded Bell for Cyberspace. The New York Times; Jul 29, 1999; pg. G7 2. Side note to cyberdeck builders: apparently an extreme degree of authenticity can be achieved simply by duct-taping an old Sony Walkman to an Apple IIc.