While I attempt to write in the third person, I feel
like for this review including some first person since this was a book that I
had recommended by multiple people when requesting books to take a look
at. As far as I am aware, Iain M. Banks while
prolific is no as well known here in the United States, most likely because of
the USA’s tendency to ignore many writers who don’t push their way into the pop
culture. While Consider Phlebas
is not his first novel, it is the first installment in his long running,
science fiction series exploring the idea of the Culture. The Culture is an intergalactic society that
seems to have an almost utopic outlook which is honestly a fascinating idea
that still intrigues me after reading this novel. Banks is clearly talented at worldbuilding,
but throughout Consider Phlebas there isn’t enough to really explore
what the Culture is, possibly because this first novel is told from an outsider’s
perspective from the Culture. The perspective
of this book is from an enemy agent while the Culture is at war with the
Idrians and Banks to his credit goes into how this war came about as well as
worldbuilding for the setting.
Consider Phlebas
takes its title from “The Waste Lands” by T.S. Elliot which should give you insight
into the tone Banks is going for but it’s a novel that I honestly struggled
with for its first half. There are some
incredibly evocative opening scenes of torturing someone for information in a
very gruesome detail, but after about 30 pages Banks slows down to an almost glacial
pace until just over the halfway point of the novel where it picks up and feels
like Banks realizes what kind of novel he is writing. The ending of the book in particular somehow
manages to pull something great, reflecting on the nature of war and an almost
nihilistic outlook on the influence one person can have. This nihilism is tempered with quite a few
instances of amazingly wry, British humor that seems tailor made to work for my
particular tastes. The main character of
Horza suddenly becomes fascinating to follow when he’s actually put into a high
pressure situation, and the plot is allowed to move along. There is some rather regressive portrayals of
sex which I think Banks was attempting to do as a genuinely sex positive thing,
but in retrospect it's very “men writing women.” This is the one thing that brings the back
half of the book down.
Overall, Consider Phlebas is not bad enough for
me to completely write off the Culture as a setting nor is it enough for me to
write Bnaks off as a writer, however, I do think that it may not really work as
an introduction to the series or Banks despite being the first book in the series. The first half just dragged itself out far
too much and while the second half massively improved things and nearly pulled something
good out of the depths there still isn’t enough exploration plus some
supplementary material before the epilogue that didn’t need to be there as it kind
of spells out the themes of the book which wasn’t subtle to begin with. 5/10.
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