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Matter | 
enlarge | Author: Iain M. Banks Publisher: Orbit Category: Book
List Price: £18.99 Buy New: £9.31 You Save: £9.68 (51%)
New (26) Used (6) Collectible (1) from £7.55
Rating: 57 reviews Sales Rank: 221
Media: Hardcover Pages: 544 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.5 x 2
ISBN: 1841494178 EAN: 9781841494173 ASIN: 1841494178
Publication Date: January 31, 2008 Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-2 business days Condition: IN STOCK - BRAND NEW - SENT FIRST CLASS - IMMEDIATE DISPATCH
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| Customer Reviews: Read 52 more reviews...
Yes and No....but more of a no May 13, 2008 I guess im going to voice the words of many other reviews regarding 'Matter' but still i feel i have to in the vain hope Iain Banks might (should he ever read his reviews) take the collective response into consideration when writing his next culture book. I've long been a fan of his culture books but something just felt a bit off the mark with 'Matter'. It had some great concepts and the protagonist Djan was a well defined character whom i love to read more about in the future. There were also a lot of moments where the usual witty Banks humor came into play. But the book did seem to drone on until a sudden burst in the last few pages. before i knew it i was trying to keep up the rapidly changing events. As the story pace came together it seemed it's cohesion was falling apart.....and then it was over in a flash. The whole Indiana Jones like ancient monster thing has been done before, and if you're going to do it again do us justice of explaining it better. I dont want to use the word incomplete as there was over 500 pages, but i would say about 200 were needless. Lets take Oreman (however you spell it) when he meets his mother...she pops into the story, consumes a few pages and is never heard of again despite being mentioned so much as a driving factor in the characters mental make-up. It's little examples like this that frustrated me. What ever happened to Tyl Loesp (again whatever the spelling)??? Was he burnt to a crisp by evil temple of doom monster, survived, impaled, bla bla bla??? I've no idea? It just seemed strange to terminate such a central character so fast.
Maybe Banks is in a lull - space opera is notoriously difficult to execute well and he has many fine examples of doing so in the past. I really wanted to like this book and i did in parts. But as an overall body of work it just does not stand up as well as some of its predecessors. Saying that, i will no doubt be waiting to get my hands on the next culture book as soon as possible. Banks has taken me on the Culture journey since i was was a teenager and im not about to jump ship yet .
Zzzzzzzzzzz May 10, 2008 I had to force myself to read this - I would usually fly through a new IMB book in hours, but this has taken me over a month to plod through. The plot doesn't get interesting until page 358. I've read much worse, but there is real a sense of disappointment when you have looked forward to a book being released and it turns out to be a grind to read.
flawed but classic Uncle Banksie May 7, 2008 It could be that Uncle Banksie has taken a slight stumble with this one - especially the machina ex deus (yes, that's intentional) ending. I can understand all the gripes I'm reading in these reviews. However, certain set pieces are classic Banks, his imagination has in no way pooped out yet, and the writing is, as always, stellar. While I preferred Look to Windward (loved it, in fact) and the Algebraist, I'd say if you're a big fan of Banks' SF, go for it, you won't be disappointed.
more like 2.5 stars, but (heh) no matter May 5, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Banks's first 3.5 Culture novels (Consider Phlebas, Player of Games, Use of Weapons and State of the Art) established The Culture as one of the great SF settings. However, the nearly 20 years since then have seen it has become a victim of its own success: subsequent Culture novels were variations on a theme: take a quirky, unique setting, present some vague threat or mystery to drive the plot along, add in the typical Culture combination of liberal angst plus hypertechnological might, and - boom - the Culture always wins, even though the individuals protagonists themselves are left either world-weary or dead.
Despite its reliance on these stock elements and considerable length (over 500 pages), Matter builds its tension well, intercutting between the Culture and the Feersum-Enjinn-like setting of the Shellworld. Its main problem is that, as the speed increases and events reach their climax in the last 50 or so pages, all the carefully built themes, mystery and characterisation goes out the window, and the action (and most of the characters) come to an abrupt end.
Matter, then, is for most of its length an entertaining read but ultimately a disappointing one. Banks's skill as a writer and his undeniable imagination are enough to keep the pages turning, but by the end, his limitations are even more starkly underlined. There's sadly nothing new here &, while he may write more Culture novels in the future, unless he is able to say something new or do something different, it'll be increasingly hard to look forward to them.
Matter matters... May 2, 2008 I have read a number of reviews about this book and must say I am surprised. I believe that this is a classic Iain M. Banks book. The story is excellent. The characterisations are superb. The imagination of the shellworld is fabulous. The ending takes your breath away - I finished this book a number of days ago and am still having flash backs to the final sequence!
Sure there are periods in the book where things go slow - show me a great book where that is not the case.
I thought the different views of the family members and their different journeys was very compelling. Love the Culture. Loved the book.
All in all an absolute return to form (I agree that the Algebraist was a struggle!) and a quite marvellous read.
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