Excession by Iain M. Banks, Iain M. Banks

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(Mass Market Paperback - Reprint)

  • Pub. Date: February 1998
  • 497pp
  • Sales Rank: 85,024
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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: February 1998
    • Publisher: Bantam Books
    • Format: Mass Market Paperback, 497pp
    • Sales Rank: 85,024

    Synopsis

    Iain M. Banks is a true original, an author whose brilliant speculative fiction has transported us into worlds of unbounded imagination and inimitable revelatory power. Now he takes us on the ultimate trip: to the edge of possibility and to the heart of a cosmic puzzle....

    Diplomat Byr Genar-Hofoen has been selected by the Culture to undertake a delicate and dangerous mission. The Department of Special Circumstances--the Culture's espionage and dirty tricks section--has sent him off to investigate a 2,500-year-old mystery: the sudden disappearance of a star fifty times older than the universe itself. But in seeking the secret of the lost sun, Byr risks losing himself.

    There is only one way to break the silence of millennia: steal the soul of the long-dead starship captain who first encountered the star, and convince her to be reborn. And in accepting this mission, Byr will be swept into a vast conspiracy that could lead the universe into an age of peace...or to the brink of annihilation.

    Annotation

    Diplomat Byr Gen-Hofoen has been selected by The Department of Special Circumstances to investigate a 2,500-year-old mystery--the reported existence and sudden disappearance of a star 50 times older than the universe itself. The only way to break the silence is to steal the soul of a long-dead starship captain who first encountered the star, and convince her to be reborn. Targeted ads. Online promo. 16,200 print.

    Publishers Weekly

    Set in the remote future, Banks's (Feersum Endjinn) latest novel mounts a galactic-scale space opera, or, to be more exact, a space opera buffa. The Culture, a "pan-civilization, pan-species grouping" dominates the known cosmos, while the borders of unexplored space are probed by its Contact ships, intelligent, witty and fully sentient beings tagged with names like "The Anticipation of a New Lover's Arrival" and "Serious Callers Only." Of course, every opera needs a crisis, and the sudden appearance of an alien artifact that can seemingly travel between universes sends ships from the Culture and its competitor, the Affront, on a race to investigate the potential invader. Meanwhile, handsome young Genar-Hofoen is dispatched on a separate mission to discover what he can about the anomaly, only to find himself buffeted by decaying Culture-Affront relations. Banks fills the supporting cast with appealing but tart-tongued heroines, cute but droll droids-the conversations between the ships alone reveal that one doesn't have to be flesh-and-blood to be neurotic, bitchy or thin-skinned-and enough sputtering politicians to keep readers smiling. Although the narrative pace occasionally drops below warp speed, he provides enough hard science to provide credibility to his fantastic, far-flung society. In short, this is a riotous space swashbuckler, a lighthearted, light-years' romp. (Feb.)

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    Customer Reviews

    • Reader Rating:
    • Ratings: 2Reviews: 2

    Excessionby Anonymous

    Reader Rating:
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    January 12, 2004: The word 'Excession' is brilliant. It's impossible that this word didn't exist before it was created by Banks. The development of the story is fairly slow, but given the title, no problem. I think it fits. The hard science in the story seem to be backed up be recent developments in physics. Beyond this book, in my opinion, Banks' invention of the Culture is brilliant but also utterly realistic: we all use mobiles (cell-phones). When will we tire of holding these 'handsets' to our ears? Who will be the first to have a wireless head-set grafted/implanted behind his or her ears? I think something like that will definitely happen. That will lead to a type of 'telepathy' that effectively is a step towards the Culture, as described by Banks.

    Excessionby Anonymous

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    January 08, 2000: Though a great book and a great author, I felt that this book was slow getting in to. This happened a little over half-way for me. I think that the utter creative and 'strange' Culuture-universe that Ian Banks has created was to 'blame'. I would suggest reading Banks' 'Player of Games' as the introduction to this universe and then read this excelent book. Don't get me wrong after I read this book I was sold on Banks' 'The Culture'.