Product Details
Matter

Matter
By Iain M. Banks

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Product Description

In a world renowned within a galaxy full of wonders, a crime within a war. For one man 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, it means returning to a place she'd thought abandoned forever. Only the sister is not what she once was; Djan Seriy Anaplian has 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. 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.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2109 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-02-05
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 656 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
'You can always expect the unexpected with an Iain M. Banks novel. So sit back and enjoy a tale with more than a twist or three in Matter. For a start, it's a rattling good story: a man accused of something he didn't do. Lots of action, lots of mind-boggling imaginative thought in this excellent piece of SF, read by Toby Longworth' Daily Express 'You can, if you must, draw clever comparisons between the conflicts in Matter and what's happening in Iraq. Or you can just sit back and listen to Toby Longworth's tongue-in-cheek reading of a very funny book' The Guardian 'There is now no British SF writer to whose work I look forward with greater keenness' The Times 'Confirms Banks as the standard by which the rest of SF is judged' The Guardian 'Explosive' Sunday Times 'Gripping, touching and funny' T.L.S. 'A wild imagination' Mail on Sunday 'Captivating' Time Out 'Spectacular ... the field needs his energy' The Scotsman 'Banks is a phenomenon' William Gibson 'Beautifully written and filled with memorable characters and startling technology, this tale of intricate politics and intersteller warfare ably demostrates that Banks is still at the height of this powers' - Publishers Weekly 'Banks can bring across the essence of a character with one sentence where others might hammer things home over the course of a chapter...Matter is as engrosing as you'd expect a Banks book to be' - Starburst 'Unexpectedly savage, emotionally powerful and impossible to forget' - The Times 'Set in an intricate, yet wonderfully realised world, this latest Culture novel will pull you in and keep you hooked right up to the explosive finale. Matter cannot fail to captivate established fans and newcomers alike' - Waterstone's Books Quarterly 'This long-awaited return for both a writing legend and his finest creation is a delight' - SFX 'A searing inquiry into justified warfare and the dangers of imposing your ideas of civilisation, told at a rattling pace with breathtaking set pieces and oddles of wit and charm. ..It's exhilarating to see what he can do when he goes full-throttle into the form: to my mind, he's simply the finest and most consistently challenging writer in that genre' - Scotland on Sunday

GUARDIAN
'Sit back and listen to Toby Longworth's tongue-in-cheek reading of a very funny book'

About the Author
Iain Banks came to widespread and controversial public notice with the publication of his first novel, THE WASP FACTORY, in 1984. He has since gained enormous popular and critical acclaim for both his mainstream and his science fiction novels.


Customer Reviews

A book of two halves3
I would agree with those who have said that this one's slow (by Banks' standards) until the last couple of hundred pages (when it focuses more fully on the Culture's involvement in the plot) in which it absolutely zips by. In the first section of the book, detailing the goings on on the Eighth level of the Shellworld, we have to make do with short interludes and the descriptions of the Shellworlds themselves for our dose of Hard Sci-Fi - the rest of it is all a bit 'swords and chainmail'.

Don't get me wrong, it's still a decent read, but Banks' Sci-Fi will always, for me, be marked against his very best Culture work, and against those standards it falls a bit short, hence only three stars.

Not the new Culture novel2
Nobody does sci-fi opera better than Iain M. Banks, and nobody denies that having the wit and imagination to conceptualise it is a difficult trick to pull off successfully. But on the strength of this under-powered outing, Banks may be losing his sci-fi crown.

Many people will buy into this book because the marketing people have billed it as the "new Culture novel', but the Culture's role is only coincidental through one of the characters.

The actual story is one of Bank's weakest, with most of the action set in a steam-powered quasi-medieval world of swords and armour, a long way from the techno-gadgetry of the Culture. Things get off to a quick start with the murder of a genocidal king by his henchman of 30 years. The next 400 pages grind past in tedium as the characters are slowly brought together, presumably to bear on the usurper tyl Loesp.

Mid-way through I started wondering why the reader or an ultra advanced civilisation like the Culture should care about the murder of a genocidal and parochial king, his 3 surviving bastard children, and their attempts to claim back the throne. The answer is I shouldn't have cared - the author seems to lose interest and hurries to kill off the book with a sacrificial ending that comes out of a nowhere and has nothing to do with the rest of the story.

If you're a fan of the Culture series, give Matter a miss and wait for the next 'proper' Culture novel.

A wasted opportunity3
This book holds such promise. The Sarl are manipulated by the Oct, who in turn are manipulated by the Nariscene, who it turn dance to the tune of the Morthanveld. The Culture are (reasonably) peripheral plays in this complex dance, or so it seems.
The reader's mind starts to buzz with the possibilities (remember Use of Weapons!). Who works for who? Who is being double, treble, or even quadruple-crossed??
Unfortunately it all comes crashing down, like Banks (or the editors) got bored, and everything gets tied up in a trite and unsatisfying way.
Damn.