Voyager is part memoir, part travel book. If you’ve read Banks’ fiction, this semi-autobiography will give you a kind of parallel universe to the world of those novels. I would never say that this book is better or anywhere near his novels. But that's mostly because he is a great novelist.
People like Banks took a hard path. Most don’t do as well at it as he has. These are the people who drift out of high school, maybe go to college, maybe go to a few colleges, but they never settle on a nice, secure way of life. They don’t learn accounting or computer science. They roam, they try things out, they seem to fail a lot at personal relationships. They are dire introverts with a counter-need to build friendships and romances.
They have lives that are interesting at least. And some of them can make other people’s lives interesting through their writing. Not all — some are undoubtedly those people you don’t want to get stuck having to listen to in some bar or at a counter at Denny’s. But out of that same group, you get people like Banks.
Almost half of the book is a single essay. It recounts Banks’ return to the Caribbean, his original time there fictionalized in Jamaica Stories. He and his wife to-be, Chase, go from island to island, mixing thoughts about the current state of the islands, with Banks’ quasi-confessional to Chase about his three earlier marriages and their sad and sometimes guilty endings.
It’s all a bit of a “journey through the past.” And parts of it aren’t easy for Banks, and, probably not for his wife-to-be either. You see some of the same self-imposed angst that his characters have. Always being at least slightly out of step, even with good times, is painful.
Many of the other essays have to do with hiking. Banks is a hiker and a mountain climber. A very serious one, even into his seventies. As a hiker and climber, he isn’t a tourist as he was sometimes in the Caribbean. It’s all about the hike, or the climb. And he doesn’t always succeed.
Banks is like his characters, more anti-hero than hero. Things don’t always go well. He can’t always be proud of what he does, but he’s trying to put together a whole that he can respect.