Neuromancer is the progenitor of cyberpunk, or at least something very close. If you like it you should look at some of the other novels Gibson wrote. Neuromancer is very much a first book and so lacks some of the polish that Gibson's latter novels have. The Difference Engine was kinda disjointed but the rest I read were good.
I thought that was the case! Awesome, I finished reading it. It read very much like a hard-bitten pulp noir transplanted into the far future, something about the prose that I can't quite put my finger on. I definitely enjoyed it, even if I'm not ashamed to admit some of its far-out technobabble went right over my head - I kinda like that, though, when a book plunges you into its world without so much as a glossary to guide yourself by.
Again, like a noir with all their gritty gangster/private eye dialect, just from a far-removed setting.
I also finished reading Web, by John Wyndham, which I'd started reading before being distracted by Neuromancer and then reading them both concurrently. It was good, though without nearly as much depth as Day of the Triffids, but then it was apparently published posthumously so it probably wasn't quite a finished product at the time. It makes it into "not too far-fetched" territory, which is what makes it reasonably unsettling despite its age.
Now I'm reading Cogan's Trade. I watched Killing Them Softly once years ago and remember a few vague plot points, but it's been long enough that I have no idea how closely it actually followed the events of the book, haha. It's an odd read, full of rambling, conversational, believable dialogues between characters that you kinda hafta imagine 'em saying to really get.
Enjoyable so far, though. I'll probably finish it on my flight tomorrow.
Oh, I'm reading a wonderful Mad magazine collection of vintage comics by one of their artists named Will Elder, too! I think I've only read one of his original parodies before (in a special edition re-issue of an old magazine), but it's fascinating to see how his style seems to have influenced Mad as a whole.