Consider Phlebas

electronic resource, 527 pages

English language

Published Dec. 1, 2009 by Orbit.

ISBN:
978-0-316-09583-9
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OCLC Number:
501038996

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3 stars (3 reviews)

The war raged across the galaxy. Billions had died, billions more were doomed. Moons, planets, the very stars themselves, faced destruction, cold-blooded, brutal, and worse, random. The Idirans fought for their Faith; the Culture for its moral right to exist. Principles were at stake. There could be no surrender.

Within the cosmic conflict, an individual crusade. Deep within a fabled labyrinth on a barren world, a Planet of the Dead proscribed to mortals, lay a fugitive Mind. Both the Culture and the Idirans sought it. It was the fate of Horza, the Changer, and his motley crew of unpredictable mercenaries, human and machine, actually to find it, and with it their own destruction.

5 editions

Not on the required reading list for the books of Iain M. Banks

3 stars

This was the first of this author's Culture science fiction books, introducing his ideas about artificial ship minds, drones, weird habitats, and aliens in conflict. I felt like he was still trying things out as a genre writer, learning to portray convincing non-human voices, describing alien settings, and so forth. It is a long story with many substantial digressions more or less unrelated to the main object of the protagonist's quest, some of which I liked but mostly found they posed problems with pacing. I read this whole thing in fifteen to twenty minute sessions over nearly three months. I think that I would have been unhappy trying to finish it in just a few marathon sessions. The prose is mostly serviceable but sometimes gets overwhelmed when the plot runs to the absurd. At one point the ship the characters are on punches its way out of a much larger …

Enjoyable despite what most people say

3 stars

Started reading this very cautiously because everyone says that this is not a representative book of the Culture setting and also not too good, but I did find it enjoyable. A bit sluggish at times, and sometimes it felt like a series of short stories instead of a cohesive novel, but I did like it. I am yet to start reading the player of games, and maybe I change my opinion about this one, but I was fairly entertained throughout the book.

Meh…

2 stars

I guess I expected more… There’s one chapter (the eaters) that you can just skip completly imo. There’s been several times when I just wanted to stop reading (the eater-chapter and gendered stereotypes that continue to exist unchanged in the far future…), but I kept going for some reason and have not been rewarded.