Iain M. Banks died earlier this year at a sadly young age,
after establishing a reputation as one of the most literary SF writers of his
generation. He wrote non-genre fiction (as Iain Banks) as well as SF. Most of
his SF novels are set in the Culture, a galactic humanoid utopia in which almost
inconceivably advanced technology provides everything that is needed, immensely
capable Artificial Intelligences sort out the mundane business of running
civilisation (the most powerful, known as Minds, usually being established in
vast spacecraft or space habitats with quirky names), and citizens are mostly
free to do whatever they like – live forever, change gender or even species,
travel the galaxy. There are various alien civilisations in close contact with
the Culture and a lot of others that are not, plus human planetary settlements that
don't enjoy the same benefits. Relationships with such peripheral groups are
handled by an organisation called Contact, and they apply less diplomatic means
when required by means of Special Circumstances, whose agents are kind of blend
of James Bond and Jason Bourne with comprehensive bio-electronic enhancements.
Matter is mainly
set in one of the peripheral human civilisations outside the Culture, which has
occupied part of the Shellworld called Sursamen. Shellworlds are artificial
constructs made by an earlier and long-gone civilisation aeons ago. They are habitats
the size of large planets and are made up of fourteen concentric hollow
spheres, each one providing a land surface comparable with a conventional
planet, held apart by a million vast columns through which travel between the
spheres is possible, and lit and warmed by thermonuclear "suns"
tracking across the 1,400 kilometre-high ceilings. The Shellworld is one of the
stars of the novel just as the Ringworld is of Niven's eponymous novel, its
curiosities being described in detail including a huge waterfall which is
cutting rapidly back through the soft earth, revealing the remains of a
forgotten city of great age and sophistication.
Different species occupy different spheres of the Shellworld,
but the humanoid civilisation on the eighth and ninth layers is at a kind of
feudal steampunk level, still engaged in fighting wars of conquest. The main focus is on the nation called the
Sarl that occupies the eighth layer and is engaged in battle with the Deldeyn
of the ninth. The Sarl are mentored by an alien species, the Oct, which have
developed an inexplicable interest in the forgotten city, especially in the
latest excavations which have uncovered something rather strange. There is
treachery and tragedy afoot among the Sarl, which draws home a princess of the
ruling family, Djan Seriy Anaplian, recruited as a child by Contact and now a
Special Circumstances agent. The story switches between Anaplian and two of her
brothers until they are finally drawn together.
As is typical of this author, Matter is a long and complex novel in which the creation of
atmosphere and background takes precedence over the action for most of its
length. It is full of rich descriptions of places, people and situations,
flavoured with Banks' usual wry humour. This slow start means that dramatic
tension suffers, although in the latter part of the novel the pace rapidly accelerates
towards the explosive conclusion. Until then, this story is not a gripping
page-turner but if you like Banks' style, you won't want to miss it. In
particular, the Shellworld is an invention that is likely to stay in the mind
for a long time.
2 comments:
Interesting, Tony. I just finished The Player of Games, the first book I've read by Banks and also part of his Culture series.
I thought that book, too, started slowly. I was 150 pages into it before I became at all engaged in the book. The characters didn't appeal to me, either. But the Culture was interesting, and so was the alien civilization which the protagonist visited.
Anyway, I'm just struck by how similar Matter sounds, not in the plot, but still a very similar kind of book. Of course, I haven't read it, so I don't know. But I'm not sure I do like his style, not especially.
Yes, he had a distinctive style which will not be to everyone's taste.
The one book by him (not in the Culture series) which I couldn't read was Feersum Endjinn, since it was partly written in an invented dialect.
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