Rob's review of Look to Windward
Look to Windward by Iain M. Banks
** spoiler alert **
After reading The Algebraist, I was going to swear off Iain M. Banks for the rest of '08. But, Ginnie recommended it so highly that I felt it was worth bumping up the list.
I can definitely see why she gives it such praise. It's a dense, nuanced story that explores the motivations for terrorism, throwing that into sharp contrast against what it means to love another, reciprocating entity. Even if that love becomes cancerously deep and pathological? Of course, the story is also a clear allegory for U.S. involvement in the Middle East (as indicated by the dedication) though it could just as easily refer to any "more advanced" culture dabbling in the interference of some perceived-as-less-advanced culture.
To that latter statement: Banks seems careful not to overly vilify the "Othered" group here. The Chelgrians are not monsters; they are not lawless nor are they barbaric. They are in fact a highly complex, very technologically advanced (cer...more
I can definitely see why she gives it such praise. It's a dense, nuanced story that explores the motivations for terrorism, throwing that into sharp contrast against what it means to love another, reciprocating entity. Even if that love becomes cancerously deep and pathological? Of course, the story is also a clear allegory for U.S. involvement in the Middle East (as indicated by the dedication) though it could just as easily refer to any "more advanced" culture dabbling in the interference of some perceived-as-less-advanced culture.
To that latter statement: Banks seems careful not to overly vilify the "Othered" group here. The Chelgrians are not monsters; they are not lawless nor are they barbaric. They are in fact a highly complex, very technologically advanced (cer...more
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