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Look to Windward
 
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Look to Windward (Hardcover)

by Iain M. Banks (Author)
4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (84 customer reviews)
RRP: £16.99
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Look to Windward + Excession + Inversions
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  • This item: Look to Windward by Iain M. Banks

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Orbit (10 Aug 2000)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 1857239695
  • ISBN-13: 978-1857239690
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 16 x 3 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (84 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 154,365 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in these categories:

    #18 in  Books > Fiction > Authors, A-Z > B > Banks, Iain M.
    #35 in  Books > Fiction > Authors, A-Z > B > Banks, Iain

Product Description

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

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What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Look to Windward
74% buy the item featured on this page:
Look to Windward 4.3 out of 5 stars (84)
£16.14
Consider Phlebas (The Culture)
7% buy
Consider Phlebas (The Culture) 4.1 out of 5 stars (63)
£5.39
The Player of Games (The Culture)
7% buy
The Player of Games (The Culture) 4.5 out of 5 stars (38)
£5.99
Use of Weapons (The Culture)
6% buy
Use of Weapons (The Culture) 4.4 out of 5 stars (59)
£6.99

 

Customer Reviews

84 Reviews
5 star:
 (54)
4 star:
 (15)
3 star:
 (6)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:
 (5)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.3 out of 5 stars (84 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Best stuff has an "M", 20 Oct 2000
By A Customer
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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12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A superb addition to the Culture saga, 26 Aug 2004
By Cartimand (Hampshire, UK.) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)      
This review is from: Look to Windward (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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15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A fantastic book, in a different way than you might expect., 18 Sep 2000
By dezadez@hotmail.com (St. John's, Canada) - See all my reviews
Some people just don't get it. Looking through the reviews below, I see (negative) comparisons to Player of Games, Consider Phlebas and Use of Weapons. Well, for those of you who haven't noticed, I. Banks has been evolving, his writing changing - both Inversions, and Look to Windward are both stylistically very different to the rest of his SF novels. They are books of emotional exploration, literate analyses of the human condition. And this is a good thing.

You see, many authors just recycle their earlier books, change the plots, throw in different characters, and never really change. Iain Banks, however, continues to astound with his superb range of ideas and abilities. Look to Windward is a beautiful, thought-provoking and intensely moving book that explores the changes that occur in people (and machines) during periods of immense emotional turmoil. The book is most closely linked to Inversions (in writing style) and Use of Weapons (as a character study), but make no mistake, this is no Consider Phlebas-style space opera (there is very little action).

So thank you, Iain, for continuing to challenge and provoke your readers (and it seems a lot of them aren't up to the challenge). This is an incredibly emotionally dense book, laced with some typically banksian humour, and I just couldn't stop reading it once I had picked it up. The plot is never so linear as that of Player of Games, and the reader has to do a lot more work to tie the ends together and make sense of the integrated whole, but this forces the readers to look inside themselves, like any good work of fiction will do. A stunning achievement, and a testimonial to the movement of s.f. incorporating literary devices. Just don't expect another space opera.

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Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
I think Iain M Banks is an extremely talented and imaginative writer. But even naturally talented writers improve with experience, and this is what I have found with his science... Read more
Published 4 months ago by T. Harries

5.0 out of 5 stars An intelligent and elegant SF thriller
Look to Windward is the nineteenth novel by British SF and mainstream author Iain M. Banks, and the seventh book set in his Culture universe. Read more
Published 5 months ago by A. Whitehead

5.0 out of 5 stars symphonic science fiction
Mahrai Ziller is a Chelgrian composer and dissident exiled to the Culture's Masaq orbital while his people descended into civil war over their caste system. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Andrew Dalby

3.0 out of 5 stars Not one of Bank's better
I like Bank's novels about the Culture, but Look to Windward is maybe the weakest in the series. Still, it contains some interesting insights into the Culture, like the life of a... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Markus Gossas

5.0 out of 5 stars Resistance is Character Forming
Iain Banks was born in Scotland in 1954 and published his first book - "The Wasp Factory" - in 1984. Read more
Published 16 months ago by cluricaune

5.0 out of 5 stars how can guilt manifest in a society of virtual immortals?
The punchline of this book is utterly unexpected and deeply humbling - I am glad I read this book, it is artfully conceived and delivered.
Published 17 months ago by Lawrence Toms

5.0 out of 5 stars A Mind blowing Book
This book is the best book I have read since "consider phlebas"
Banks again proves that his imagination is on form by producing this epic space opera. Read more
Published 24 months ago by Morlich07

5.0 out of 5 stars As satisfying as a hot bath on a cold day
This is the fourth "Culture" novel from Iain M. Banks i have read, they get easier to grasp, and more enjoyable with each addition. Read more
Published on 16 May 2007 by G. Bethune

5.0 out of 5 stars Brilliant
Having just read The Algabrabist by Iain Banks, I bought this because I loved his style.

Brilliant - Its again about the Culture, as previous books, but the style has... Read more
Published on 28 Oct 2006 by CjW

5.0 out of 5 stars Go on, give yourself a treat!
Iain Banks has single-handedly re-invented the whole Space Opera genre, and this book is his best yet. Read more
Published on 18 Aug 2005 by vfhackenbacker

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