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Title: Consider Phlebas
Series: The Culture #1
Author: Iain Banks
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 545
Format: Digital Edition
Title: Consider Phlebas
Series: The Culture #1
Author: Iain Banks
Rating: 4 of 5 Stars
Genre: SF
Pages: 545
Format: Digital Edition
Synopsis:
|
There is War between the Idirans, a culture of 3 legged beings with religious mono-mania and The Culture, a decadent collection of self-serving beings who live for pleasure and are ruled by AI and their machines.
We
follow the story of Horza, a humanoid with the ability to change his
face and body, a Changer, who is allied with the Idirans, as he
attempts to capture a Culture Mind that has done the impossible and
* insert
super science term
* jumped onto a planet,
against all known rules of everything.
The
Iridians want to capture the Mind to learn it's tricks or at least to
prevent The Culture from learning how it did what it did and The
Culture wants it to learn how it did what it did. Unfortunately, it
chose to jump onto a Dead World, a world that is supervised by a
vast, intellectual non-corporeal being. One that brooks no
interference or even cares about the differences that the Iridians
and The Culture have.
Horza
goes from one bad situation to another right up unto the end where he
is betrayed by the Iridians, who view the Changers as no more than
vermin even while using them. In the process he loses his lover and
newly conceived baby and most of his Changer compatriots.
The
book ends with everyone involved dying in one way or another and a
history of the war and it's conclusion. Bleak stuff.
My
Thoughts:
|
Whereas the Player of Games really struck me as a dishonest
take on the idea of Utopia, this book felt more honest and how humans
would actually react. This was a novel about The Culture from it's
enemies perspective. That allowed us the reader to see things that we
couldn't in Player of Games. I would definitely recommend
reading this one first just so Banks can't sell you on the idea that
The Culture is a true Utopia.
I ended up feeling bad for Horza for most of the book. He's rescued
from a death sentence only to be tossed out of an Iridian spaceship
that's about to go into battle. He's then captured by pirates and has
to kill a crew member to join. He then participates in several failed
piratical ventures and in the final one is stranded on a Orbital that
is going to be destroyed by The Culture in 3 days. He does escape and
make it back to the pirate ship and takes it over as it's captain.
But a Culture agent is on board. The same agent who got him the death
sentence at the beginning of the book. He then makes his way to the
Dead World and gets permission by the Overmind to land. Only to have
Iridian Covert Ops teams try to take him out even though he's on
their side. And while all the Iridians die, they also manage to kill
everyone except Horza and The Culture agent. And it gets better.
Horza dies just as he's taken to a ship with the medical facilities
to heal him. The Culture Agent can't handle the guilt and so she goes
to sleep for 300 years only to commit suicide when she wakes.
Now normally that much bad stuff would depress me. But this time
around? It simply re-affirmed my faith in human nature, ie, that
we're a bunch of no good sinners who can't pull ourselves up by our
bookstraps. I love it when Utopia minded people get a good dose of
fallen nature. Wake up and smell the coffee you idiots.
So far, all threats to The Culture have been external. I'm wondering
when Banks will write about some local, internal threat that wants
power. While the AI's might be in charge, it's definitely not as
pronounced as it is in Neal Asher's Polity
series. I'm also still not convinced of The Culture as something
real or viable. No central authority, no defining characteristics. It
just doesn't jive with my understanding of humanity.
What makes this a 4star book is the fact that the author is aware of
everything that I've mentioned and takes it into account. I might
think he's wrong, but he's not oblivious and it takes some good
writing to promote something even while mainly showing its flaws.
★★★★☆
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