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Look To Windward
 
 

Look To Windward [Kindle Edition]

Iain M. Banks
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (96 customer reviews)

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Amazon.co.uk Review

When using that middle initial M., Iain Banks writes grand space opera combining galactic scope with twisty, tricky probes into the darkest secrets of human and other minds. Look to Windward revisits the utopian but ruthless interstellar Culture introduced in Consider Phlebas, exploring the complex aftermath of a rare Culture mistake--humanitarian tinkering with an unjust civilization that accidentally led to massive civil war and billions dead.

After a harrowing battle flashback, the scene shifts to one of the Culture's wonderfully landscaped, ring-shaped artificial worlds called Orbitals. A ghastly light is awaited in the sky from distant suns detonated in the war of Consider Phlebas eight centuries earlier; an occasion for sombre festivity, pyrotechnics, and a memorial symphony from exiled alien composer Ziller. Meanwhile another tortured member of Ziller's race--aggressors and victims in that more recent civil war--arrives on a mission whose dreadful nature emerges through fragments of slowly returning memory. Elsewhere, in the exuberantly imagined airsphere home of floating "behemothaurs" almost too huge to imagine, the clue to what's happening falls belatedly into inexperienced hands...

While scattering red herrings and building tension for his final burst of literal and moral fireworks, Banks shows us around the Orbital in sensuous, lyrical travelogues. Rich scenery, high living, low comedy and dangerous sports contrast with reflections on mortality and the lingering aftershock of both those wars, recalled by ravaged veterans. Look to Windward culminates with deft twists, inversions, parallels, and savage justice, as unexpected as we expect from this author. Recommended. --David Langford

Review

'In terms of sheer storytelling prowess and verve, LOOK TO WINDWARD is a work of genius' SFX 'A great book' NEW SCIENTIST 'Banks keeps ratcheting up the suspense' GUARDIAN 'A mordant wit, a certain savagery and a wild imagination' MAIL ON SUNDAY 'Banks is a phenomenon ' William Gibson 'It's a gymnasium for the imagination' EVENING STANDARD 'Spectacular ... the field needs his energy, skill and invention' THE SCOTSMAN 'Banks's mind-expanding future history is unrivalled for imaginative sweep, startling ideas, and savage but wry sense of humour. One of the very best just got even better' STARBURST 'When using that middle initial M., Iain Banks writes grand space opera combining galactic scope with twisty, tricky probes into the darkest secrets of human and other minds. Look to Windward revisits the utopian but ruthless interstellar Culture introduced in Consider Phlebas, exploring the complex aftermath of a rare Culture mistake--humanitarian tinkering with an unjust civilization that accidentally led to massive civil war and billions dead. After a harrowing battle flashback, the scene shifts to one of the Culture's wonderfully landscaped, ring-shaped artificial worlds called Orbitals. A ghastly light is awaited in the sky from distant suns detonated in the war of Consider Phlebas eight centuries earlier; an occasion for sombre festivity, pyrotechnics, and a memorial symphony from exiled alien composer Ziller. Meanwhile another tortured member of Ziller's race--aggressors and victims in that more recent civil war--arrives on a mission whose dreadful nature emerges through fragments of slowly returning memory. Elsewhere, in the exuberantly imagined airsphere home of floating "behemothaurs" almost too huge to imagine, the clue to what's happening falls belatedly into inexperienced hands... While scattering red herrings and building tension for his final burst of literal and moral fireworks, Banks shows us around the Orbital in sensuous, lyrical travelogues. Rich scenery, high living, low comedy and dangerous sports contrast with reflections on mortality and the lingering aftershock of both those wars, recalled by ravaged veterans. Look to Windward culminates with deft twists, inversions, parallels, and savage justice, as unexpected as we expect from this author. Recommended.' - David Langford, AMAZON.CO.UK REVIEW

Product details

  • Format: Kindle Edition
  • File Size: 565 KB
  • Print Length: 416 pages
  • Publisher: Hachette Digital (27 May 2010)
  • Sold by: Amazon Media EU S.à r.l.
  • Language English
  • ASIN: B003MQM7A0
  • Text-to-Speech: Enabled
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (96 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #9,998 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
35 of 35 people found the following review helpful
Best stuff has an "M" 20 Oct 2000
By A Customer
Format:Hardcover
I REALLY don't understand all those previous reviews which give this one or two stars. I think Look to Windward is a beautiful, subtle meditation on life, death, revenge, heaven, eternity, oblivion. The final dialogue between the Hub Mind and Quilan is just wonderful - I had tears in my eyes. The people who compare this to the previous Culture novels, don't really seem to get it (IMHO). Banks has written several Culture novels, but can anyone really say that any two are similar in style and content to each other. I don't think so. And that is part of Banks' genius - he can create a whole universal canvas which is entirely consistent from one novel to the next, but still have the ability to place individual stories within their own framework and context. Look to Windward contains some of the best imagery Banks has produced - I particularly like the idea of the light from the dying star arriving at the orbital millenia (in real time) after the war which caused it has ended, and being witnessed for a second time by those that took part in that war. I also wouldn't mind a go at lava-rafting (backed-up or not!). I read all of Iain Banks' books as soon as they come out, but I've got to admit that I think he writes his best stuff these days with an "M" in his name. Wasn't too taken with the Business (although that did seem to me to be an attempt to place the Culture in the context of the real world - how the Culture might have begun??), and Song of Stone was an interesting exercise in form, but not much else. Look to Windward (and Inversions before it) is fine writing though. I hope it isn't the case (as has been rumoured) that he wont be writing any books (of any kind) for a while.
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18 of 18 people found the following review helpful
By Cartimand TOP 1000 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
Following the baffling (or intriguing, depending on your point of view) mediaeval shenanigans of Inversions, Iain M Banks has genuinely delivered the goods with this one, giving the Culture aficionados what they *really* wanted.

"Look to Windward" is a staggeringly imaginative chunk of hard sci-fi, with some of the strongest characterization and mind-bogglingly grandiose scope since Banks' classic "Consider Phlebus".

Who could not empathize with the battle-weary, bereaved Quilan whose tortured soul seeks oblivion, and yet who could not condemn him for the ghastly mission he agrees to undertake?

Has absolute power begun to corrupt the Culture? Can they honestly still claim the moral high ground after their ill-judged and catastrophic intervention in the war?

This novel touches on some pretty profound ethical dilemmas along the way. There is also much wise and possibly prophetic investigation into the nature of the soul, heaven and omnipotence.

Please don't get the impression that this is all heavy stuff though; there is much amusing and witty dialogue between the chief protagonists. Some of Ziller's bon mots will have you in stitches!

To the delight of the Culture anoraks, there is also a huge amount of information about Culture minds/hubs, personality backups, orbitals and (delightfully!) a roll call of some of the more eccentric Culture ship names.

How I would love to visit Masaq' Orbital; I guarantee you will too!

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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Iain Banks has single-handedly re-invented the whole Space Opera genre, and this book is his best yet. He makes Foundation, Norstrilia and Known Space - and any other fictitious universe I have ventured into - look predictable, folksy and unimaginative.

The only drawback to reading Banks is his penchant for putting at least one scene of stomach-churning nastiness into each book. Worrying about what horrors may lie in wait on the next page can make it hard for sensitive souls like me to enjoy reading him. Be reassured that in this one the scene in question comes only a few pages from the end, is very short, and is done with such a light touch that it almost fails to offend.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews
the fabulous Ian M, Banks
As an avid Sci Fi reader, now firmly hooked on Kindle - i just read this for the second time: the first being a few years ago in paperback. Read more
Published 4 days ago by skd
Disappointing.
This isn't awful, just boring.

The characters are ok, but none of them stand out as memorable or interesting. Read more
Published 6 months ago by plot hound
Look to Windward
Another Culture novel - quite a slow read to start with & a complex plot. More exciting towards the end.
Published 11 months ago by Mick Miller
Too long for what it is
Having read many Ian M Rankin books and loved them, I looked forward to this one. Sadly though there are many wonderful SF ideas woven through the story but they only serve to show... Read more
Published 12 months ago by N. Weatherspoon
Dreadful!
Seller purposely advertised book with cover picture that was TOTALLY MISLEADING. When arrived (hey presto) a different book. Read more
Published 14 months ago by Gordon
Not bad
This is the fourth Iain M. Banks novel I've read. It wasn't my favourite, but neither was it the worst (the awful Use of Weapons gets that award), but is nowhere near as good as... Read more
Published 14 months ago by John
slow and mostly boring
I was given this book by a friend as a introduction to Iain M Banks. Having just completed it I dont feel this book would recommend him as an author to new-comers. Read more
Published 15 months ago by G. Bowen
Sci-Fi writing at it's best
"Look to Windward" is right up there among the best of Iain M Banks science fiction novels, nearly all of which are excellent. Read more
Published 17 months ago by L. Davidson
Another Ringworld Novel
If you enjoyed Larry Niven's Ringworld back in the 1970's then you will enjoy this story which is based on a Ringworld. Read more
Published 18 months ago by J. M. Lilley
look to windward
I missed the point of the whole story. Seems very scrambled to me. I liked his other sci-fi much more.
Published 23 months ago by bertybetta
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We always want more, he thought, we always take our past successes for granted and assume they but point the way to future triumphs. &quote;
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But the universe does not have our own best interests at heart, and to assume for a moment that it does, ever did or ever might is to make the most calamitous and hubristic of mistakes. &quote;
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Others, slightly less self-deceiving, come to accept that the process of travelling itself offers, if not fulfilment, then relief from the feeling that they should be feeling fulfilled. &quote;
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