Series: Book 5 in the Culture series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: EN-SciFi, Lang:en
Summary
It's not easy to disturb a mega-utopia as vast as the one
Iain M. Banks has created in his popular Culture series,
where life is devoted to fun and ultra-high-tech is de
rigueur. But more than two millennia ago the appearance--and
disappearance--of a star older than the universe caused quite
a stir. Now the mystery is back, and the key to solving it
lies in the mind of the person who witnessed the first
disturbance 2,500 years ago. But she's dead, and getting her
to cooperate may not be altogether easy. From versatile Scottish writer Banks, another sf yarn
about the tolerant, diverse, far-future Culture (The Player
of Games, 1989, etc.). The Culture is subtly controlled by
prodigiously intelligent artificial Minds, who, Banks
intimates, spend most of their spare time navel-gazing. Here,
a huge, enigmatic object referred to as the Excession appears
in space and interacts with the Culture's energy grid in ways
previously considered impossible. Diplomat Byr Genar-Hofoen
of the Department of Special Circumstances is sent to
investigate--but, sidetracked by beautiful, talented,
spoiled-brat operative Ulver Seich and by old flame Dajeil
Gelian, it will be a long time before he draws near the
object. Meanwhile, certain Minds occupying a vast array of
self-controlled spaceships suspect that still other Minds are
involved in a conspiracy--but to what end? With the Culture
thus distracted by the Excession, the cruel, dangerously
expansionist alien Affront seize the opportunity to hijack a
Culture battle fleet and start a war that they only gradually
realize they've been suckered into and can't possibly win.
Brilliantly inventive and amusing--whole sections read like
strings of knowing jokes--but a mess: Chattering spaceships
with splendid if confusing names (e.g., Not Invented Here and
Shoot Them Later) don't compensate for the absence of real
characters. --
Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights
reserved.
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