William Ford Gibson was born in 1948 in the coastal city of
Conway, South Carolina and spent most of his childhood in
Wytheville, Virginia although his family moved around frequently due to his father's position as manager in a large construction company. When Gibson was six years old, his father choked to death in a restaurant while on a business trip. His mother was unable to tell him the bad news and someone else informed him about his father's death.
After this tragedy, Gibson's mother returned them to a small mining town in the
Appalachians, which he later described as "a place where
modernity had arrived to some extent but was deeply distrusted" and credits the beginnings of his relationship with
science fiction with the subsequent feeling of abrupt
exile. At fifteen he was sent to a private boarding school in
Tucson, Arizona by his then "chronically anxious and depressive" mother, who in turn died when Gibson was 18.
Tom Maddox has commented that Gibson "grew up in an America as disturbing and surreal as anything
J. G. Ballard ever dreamed."
After his mothers death, Gibson left school without graduating and traveled to California and Europe. Following his return in 1967, he moved to
Canada "to
avoid the Vietnam war draft", and "did literally evade the draft, as they never bothered drafting me." That year he appeared in a
CBC newsreel item about
hippie subculture in
Yorkville, Toronto. After travelling to
Europe, he and his future wife settled in
Vancouver, British Columbia in 1972. Gibson earned "a desultory bachelor's degree in English" at the
University of British Columbia. Through studying English literature, Gibson was exposed to a wider range of fiction than he would have read otherwise, something he credits with giving him ideas inaccessible from within the culture of
science fiction, including an awareness of
postmodernity. It was at UBC that he attended his first course on science fiction, at the end of which he was encouraged to write his first short story, "
Fragments of a Hologram Rose". Thereafter, Gibson worked at various jobs, including a three-year stint as
teaching assistant on a film history course of his
alma mater, before resolving to write full-time. Although he retains U.S. citizenship, Gibson has spent most of his adult life in Canada, and still lives in the Vancouver area.