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Matter by Iain M. Banks
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Orbit (2008), Edition: Export Ed., Paperback, 544 pages

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Showing 1-5 of 36 (next | show all)
I consider myself a great fan of Iain M. Banks' Culture novels and was surprised to be a little disappointed by this one. It is a fairly long book (nearly 600 pages). The first half plods along as a creditable work of historical adventure fiction which later morphs into a sci-fi novel that involves agents of the Culture's Special Circumstance. It is reasonably well paced - sometimes a little predictable, but with enough surprises to be a page turner. The disappointment comes in the final few chapters where we get to a shoot 'em up storyline that is ultimately a little unsatisfying. Although perseverance to the final pages does reward with a clever upbeat ending. Worth reading but not one that one savours for long after completion. Nowhere near as good as Excession. ( )
  CaptainPea | Dec 8, 2009 |
Another novel set in Banks' Culture universe, this book mostly follows three siblings. Oramen, on their fairly primitive home world, is Prince Regent, following his father's death in war. His sister Djan left many years ago and is now a culture agent. Their brother Ferbin witnesses something he shouldn't have, and sets out to seek his sister's aid. Eventually their stories end up tied back together again, but in a way that none of them expected.

As always Banks brings us rich new worlds, and alien races we hadn't encountered before, as well as some familiar aspects from other books in the universe. The plot is fairly fast moving and exciting, though some details seem almost irrelevant. And the ending is spectacular. All in all perhaps a bit too brutal in places, but enjoyable as always. ( )
  lnr_blair | Dec 7, 2009 |
Gripping... though I'm still undecided as to what I think about the ending. ( )
  ranaverde | Oct 30, 2009 |
Another excellent Culture novel from Banks. An interesting theme of perspective echoed at various levels through the plot and characters. His usual dollop of hugely massive imagination still impresses.

Ultimately he still manage to show good triumphing over evil, even if he keeps you guessing which is which until the very end.

Great science fiction that makes you think. ( )
  psiloiordinary | Oct 18, 2009 |
banks does sensawunda like no-one else I know. A war between primitive (by galactic standards) civilisations on two different levels of an onion-like Shellworld reveals an ancient sentient artefact buried for millennia. The caretakers of the world believe it is their ancestor. The Culture representatives are somewhat skeptical. A very human story set against a backdrop of enormous scale. ( )
  pauliharman | Jun 9, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 36 (next | show all)
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Epigraph
Dedication
For Adèle
First words
A light breeze produced a dry rattling sound from some nearby bushes.
Quotations
A temple was worth a dozen barracks; a militia man carrying a gun could control a small unarmed crowd only for as long as he was present; however, a single priest could put a policeman inside the head of every one of their flock, for ever.
Djan Seriy's discomfiture was being caused by the fact that some of the Culture's more self-congratulatingly clever Minds (not in itself an underpopulated category), patently with far too much time on their platters, had come up with the shiny new theory that the Culture was not just in itself completely spiffing and marvellous and a credit to all concerned, it somehow represented a sort of climactic stage for all civilisations, or at least for all those which chose to avoid heading straight for Sublimation as soon as technologically possible (Sublimation meant your whole civilisation waved farewell to the matter-based universe pretty much altogether, opting for a sort of honorary godhood).

Avoid self-destruction, recognize -- and renounce -- money for the impoverishing ration system it really was, become a bunch of interfering, do-gooding busybodies, resist the siren call of self-promotion that was Subliming and free your conscious machines to do what they did best -- essentially, running everything -- and there you were; millenia of smug self-regard stretched before you, no matter what species you had started from.
Anaplian realised they had got rather rapidly to the point that all such conversations regarding the strategic intentions of the Culture tended to arrive at sooner or later, where it became clear that the issue boiled down to the question What Are The Minds Really Up To? This was always a good question, and it was usually only churls and determinedly diehard cynics who even bothered to point out that it rarely, if ever, arrived paired up with an equally good answer.

The normal, almost ingrained response of people at this point was to metaphorically throw their hands in the air and exclaim that if *that* was what it really all boiled down to then there was no point in even attempting to pursue the issue further because as soon as the motivations, analyses and stratagems of Minds become the defining factor in a matter, all bets were most profoundly off, for the simple reason that any and all efforts to second-guess such infinitely subtle and hideously devious devices were self-evidentally futile.

Anaplian was not so sure about this. It was her suspicion that it suited the purposes of the Minds rather too neatly that people believed this so unquestioningly. Such a reaction represented not so much the honest appraisal of further enquiry as being pointless as an unthinking rejection of the need to enquire at all.
Last words
Disambiguation notice
This is a Culture novel by Banks-with-an-M released in 2008. "Matter" was also a working title of the "non-M" book "The Steep Approach to Garbadale", but this is not that book. Please do not combine this with Garbadale.
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0316005363, Hardcover)

In a world renowned even within a galaxy full of wonders, a crime within a war. For one brother it means a desperate flight, and a search for the one - maybe two - people who could clear his name. For his brother it means a life lived under constant threat of treachery and murder. And for their sister, even without knowing the full truth, it means returning to a place she'd thought abandoned forever.

Only the sister is not what she once was; Djan Seriy Anaplian has changed almost beyond recognition to become an agent of the Culture's Special Circumstances section, charged with high-level interference in civilisations throughout the greater galaxy.

Concealing her new identity - and her particular set of abilities - might be a dangerous strategy, however. In the world to which Anaplian returns, nothing is quite as it seems; and determining the appropriate level of interference in someone else's war is never a simple matter.

MATTER is a novel of dazzling wit and serious purpose. An extraordinary feat of storytelling and breathtaking invention on a grand scale, it is a tour de force from a writer who has turned science fiction on its head.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:13 -0400)

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