'Cyberspace' coiner returns to native SC for honorary degree

 

The man who coined the word "cyberspace" has returned to his home page.

Author William Gibson was given an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Coastal Carolina University in Conway, where he was born 60 years ago and which he last saw when he was 5.

"I was born here in the middle of the previous century, and spent the last 30 years writing about imaginary versions of the current century," Gibson said in a short address Saturday. "Somehow, I never expected to see Conway in the 21st century. I think it looks very good indeed, and I'm proud to be born here."

Gibson came up with the term now used for the Internet in his 1984 novel "Neuromancer."

His family moved around with his father's work, and he ended up in British Columbia, where he still lives. He said he has thought of South Carolina only in passing, usually when an airport customs officer looks at his passport and asks where he was born.

"It's nice to find such a nice place," Gibson said in remarks published online in the Sun News in nearby Myrtle Beach.

Gibson said he doesn't think the town of Conway had any influence on his fiction, but he is sure that Myrtle Beach has crept in.

"This would have been my first sense of the beach," Gibson said. "When I think of beaches, I'm probably thinking of Myrtle Beach, although not that consciously."

His latest novel, "Spook Country," was published last year.

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