Paul Kincaid
Autor(a) de Iain M. Banks (Modern Masters of Science Fiction)
Obras por Paul Kincaid
Into the Woods: Robert Holdstock Remembered 3 exemplares
Mexicon III: a science fiction convention 2 exemplares
GUFFaw 4 1 exemplar
John Clute; an appreciation 1 exemplar
Associated Works
Bull Spec #7 — Contribuidor — 1 exemplar
Etiquetado
Conhecimento Comum
- Data de nascimento
- 1952
- Sexo
- male
- Nacionalidade
- UK
- Locais de residência
- UK
- Relações
- Speller, Maureen Kincaid (spouse)
- Prémios e menções honrosas
- Guest of Honour, Eastercon, UK (1996)
Membros
Críticas
Prémios
You May Also Like
Associated Authors
Estatísticas
- Obras
- 16
- Also by
- 22
- Membros
- 157
- Popularidade
- #133,743
- Avaliação
- 3.6
- Críticas
- 11
- ISBN
- 14
- Pedras de toque
- 7
The division of Banks' books into the two categories - mainstream and science fiction - is, as I said, blurred in this study. Other critical studies, and indeed, other critics, have failed to do this, and that approach gives a false view of Iain Banks as an author. His first three novels all had elements of the fantastic in them; but science fiction was his first love, and any analysis of Banks' output has to acknowledge that. (Kincaid does comment disparagingly that many who wrote obituaries of Banks, especially in the print media, commented on his career and acclaimed his mainstream novels but at best only touched on his science fiction without having ever read any of it - a palpable hit.) The mainstream novels that have more or less non-fantastic settings - The Crow Road, The Business, Dead Air and Stonemouth - are only really mentioned in passing when a theme, such as the role of games, occurs in them.
Of particular interest is the relationship between The Steep Approach to Garbadale and Transition - material excised from the first book appeared in the second - although it is a pity that Kincaid overlooked The Spheres, a chapbook published by the Birmingham SF Group on the occasion of Iain's appearance as Guest of Honour at their 2010 convention, Novacon; as that is a discarded opening chapter that, if kept, might have made Transition a very different book.
The influences on Banks are given their due, including Alasdair Gray, although I was pleasantly surprised to see that IMB's taste also ran to the songs of Pete Atkin, whose lyricist was his friend Clive James. (Yes, that Clive James.) As we are talking about friendships, Banks' friend Ken Macleod is duly identified as a huge influence on the evolution of his novels, though many of his friends are also cited where their influence comes into play. Iain Banks was notable as a successful author for maintaining friendships from his life before he was famous. (This is a theme that many of his "mainstream" novels keep returning to, and indeed there are strong relationships in the science fiction books as well.) It is little wonder that Banks took to SF fandom so very readily; and fandom returned the favour. In the end, Kincaid emphasises how much Iain Banks enjoyed life, and believed that his readers should have as much fun reading his books as he did writing them. In this, he succeeded. And although Kincaid does not spare criticism of the novels, this monograph ends on a note of joy which more academic studies would be far less likely to: "His books could be many things... but the one quality they all share, science fiction or mainstream or the many that don't quite belong in either category, is that they are fun to read."… (mais)