The Procrastinator
1 Candlepower Brain
I am a longtime Banks scifi reader, read them all, and I have to say I really enjoyed The Algebraist. I think I liked it better second time around, but thats one of the reasons I like Banks - he makes good rereaders. Personally I've become a little leery of making up my mind on the like/dislike thing with Iain on the first read, because there's usually something in his books that disturbs me or doesn't sit right, that stays hanging around in my brain for a while like the aftermath of a bad dream. Case in point, the end of Matter. I think I have found with every one of his books that the first read is a mixed bag for me - some parts fit really well and are effortless to love - for instance his drones, I always love his drones - and other parts chafe, or rub, or irritate in some way. So far, on rereading (in a while) I find that somehow a reconciliation is going on - I'm picking up on something that I missed in the thrill of the first read - or i've had time to come to terms with something - or I've had time to get used to something. Like the spelling in Feersum Endjinn, that really jarred me on the first read and I nearly didn't reread it because of it - luckily I did, and loved it.
Now, to the Matter at hand - there were some things that I didn't much like with this book, but somehow I still - enjoyed is too simple a word - interacted with it maybe - on a level of pleasure/pain that I always get with Banks and rarely with any other SF writer. Is it as good as his earlier stuff? For a truly honest, objective response, I am going to have to read it again (in a while).
But this is why I love Banks. He challenges me in some way, every time. He kills someone I didn't want him to (often happens). He doesn't always play fair. Something happens that outrages my sense of natural justice. There might be no drones in the story, and I love drones. The ending is rushed. I didn't want the book to end, but if if had to end, I didn't want it to end there. That shouldn't have happened right then. And so forth and so on.
And here I am loving his books and going back to them repeatedly over the years, seeing different parts of the pleasure/pain every time. I don't know any other SF writer that has this impact on me, I really don't.
Now, to the Matter at hand - there were some things that I didn't much like with this book, but somehow I still - enjoyed is too simple a word - interacted with it maybe - on a level of pleasure/pain that I always get with Banks and rarely with any other SF writer. Is it as good as his earlier stuff? For a truly honest, objective response, I am going to have to read it again (in a while).
But this is why I love Banks. He challenges me in some way, every time. He kills someone I didn't want him to (often happens). He doesn't always play fair. Something happens that outrages my sense of natural justice. There might be no drones in the story, and I love drones. The ending is rushed. I didn't want the book to end, but if if had to end, I didn't want it to end there. That shouldn't have happened right then. And so forth and so on.
And here I am loving his books and going back to them repeatedly over the years, seeing different parts of the pleasure/pain every time. I don't know any other SF writer that has this impact on me, I really don't.