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Loading... A Song of Stoneby Iain Banks
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. I usually love Banks' work, both with and without the M -- but I abandoned this one less than a third of the way through. It tried so terribly hard to be shocking and boundary-pushing, and succeeded only in being so deadly boring and predictable that I couldn't make myself read any further. ( )The only Ian Banks novel I haven't been able to finish; as far as I could tell before I gave up on it, it had no redeeming features. I may give it a chance again someday in case it gets better at the end, but I'd have to be pretty bored and stuck for something to read. I was really disappointed by this. I'm used to Banks having a streak of darkness through his novels, but this one seems to have been more an experiment in having a book with no redeeming features whatsoever. It's more a collection of emotionless scenes of depravity, that ultimately fails to deliver any sense of worth. TBR Awful no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com (ISBN 0349110115, Paperback)This brutal tale starts in a bleak, brutal European any-war. Abel and Morgan live in a forboding castle, alone and isolated, until the conflict intrudes on their numb lives in the form of a cruel mercenary lieutenant and her violent, ravaging men who take up residence. From there, the tale disintegrates into darkness and atrocity, punctuated by Abel's memories of earlier joy and pain. Iain Banks pushes the story steadily downward, dragging the morbidly fascinated reader into the depths of human despair. Gang rape, torture, and incest are seen through Abel's uncaring eyes--this book is not for the squeamish. And although Banks strives for a Passion play in the end, what's missing is even the tiniest kernel of real redemption. Fans of The Wasp Factory and Banks's other non-science fiction works will find familiar details here, but A Song of Stone stands alone as a fable of hopelessness. --Therese Littleton(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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