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Loading... Feersum Endjinn (original 1994; edition 1996)by Iain Banks
Work InformationFeersum Endjinn by Iain M. Banks (1994)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. I love Banks but I was not a fan of this book. ( ) I’ve read well over 1000 books over the years. It is VERY rare for me to fail to finish a book (easily under 10). This is quite possibly the worst book I’ve ever tried to read. I say “try to read”, because after roughly 150 pages, I realized that I had absolutely no clue what was going on. I’m used to encountering books (usually science fiction), that require 20-30 pages for the reader to become familiar with the landscape and the story arc. To read 150 pages and still have no clue? Best I could tell, there is a main character that is inhabiting some kind of virtual reality. This construct allows characters to “die” eight times before ?? Someone or something is repeatedly killing him. He is down to his last life. This story thread comprises about 30% of the narrative. Of the remaining 70%, a significant part is simply gibberish. This gibberish is language consisting of phonetic spellings, pidgin English and even mathematical symbols (have to= 1/2 2). Deciphering this text is not difficult, but can be cumbersome. More objectionable to me is the fact that after going through the exercise, you are left with…nothing; stream of consciousness drivel. Feersum Indjinn, get it? The remainder was impossible for me to make any sense of. 150 pages of this garbage was all the time I felt I needed to invest. I first read this book when it originally came out, but only in small chunks and so didn't really get it. It took me almost to the end of the book to work out that we were actually inside a joke megastructure that was actually built like an "ordinary" castle but scaled up many, many times, and that was so old that actual physical landscape had formed inside some of the rooms. So I put it back on the shelf for another day. Now, I've finally re-read it, in sufficiently large chunks to get a far better picture of what was happening. And I really enjoyed it. The political and military scrabbling about was suitably byzantine, the sheer imagination of the mad world-building (that ultimately actually had a point) was breath-taking, and I actually developed a strong liking for Bascule, the POV character who speaks in phonetics. Admittedly, I actually had to read Bascule's episodes out loud (fortunately, I wasn't in public or in company at the time), the way I do with foreign languages, which aided the flow of reading a lot. Trying to parse Bascule's phonetic speech was difficult, but speaking it made things much easier. Possibly, it rendered Bascule into a proper British character, of a sort I could identify with; though readers should not make the mistake of equating phonetic speech with a lack of intelligence. Bascule is a Teller, someone who can project themselves into the data Crypt, a repository for uploaded personalities and the sum total of human knowledge. We follow another character, a military commander who makes a few too many enemies on his own side, into the Crypt after he is assassinated. Two other characters - a female scientist and an incarnated digital personality with a Mission - make up the other protagonists in the intrigue. I got the impression that the Crypt was a trial run for the virtual Hells we would later find in 'Surface Detail'; and indeed, the whole thing has a baroque feel that Banks would return to on a number of occasions. But I was pleased to have revisited this book, and delighted with what I found. A very good book, a very interesting book, but also a book that has some parts that are really really really hard to read because it is written in like "spoken slang" english. Like u hav 2 imagin tis is ritten like tis and @ ti moment u get so confused abut tis. Yeah, hard to read, especially if you are not a native reader. Anyway, would still recommend to read :D no reviews | add a review
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Count Sessine is about to die for the very last time...Chief Scientist Gadfium is about to receive the mysterious message she has been waiting for from the Plain of Sliding Stones...And Bascule the Teller, in search of an ant, is about to enter the chaos of the crypt...And everything is about to change...For this is the time of the encroachment and, although the dimming sun still shines on the vast, towering walls of Serehfa Fastness, the end is close at hand. The King knows it, his closest advisers know it, yet sill they prosecute the war against the clan Engineers with increasing savagery. The crypt knows it too; so an emissary has been sent, an emissary who holds the key to all their futures. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.914Literature English & Old English literatures English fiction Modern Period 1901-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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