Inversions
1988 • 343 pages

Ratings36

Average rating3.5

15

Inversions is probably my second favorite culture novel after Use of Weapons; this book was subtle, atmospheric, and was so different from everything that came before that I almost can't believe it's in the same series. I took a detour from The Culture after the disappointment I got from Excession and I am delighted to say that this novel is the “inversion” of that book; every gripe I had with Excession, every missed mark or narrative flaw, is thankfully absent from this work.

Banks' continues to demonstrate his love of complex narrative vehicles, this time (mercifully) it's only a dual-narrative. Rather than a space/Culture setting this story is set on a backward (read: feudal/enlightenment era) planet and follows the King's doctor Vosill and the Protector's bodyguard DeWar. You would be excused for not even considering the book to be Sci-Fi or culture related as any connection this book has to the rest of the series is fairly subdued, mainly in the form of fairytales and casual conversation. I am tempted to say that this story can be read standalone because it definitely could be; but-for the ending, which does involve Culture/SC/Contact/Sci-Fi elements but does not explain them.

It was fulfilling to finally read a story set in the Culture that wasn't bouncing all over the place trying to cram as much (admittedly very cool and interesting) Sci-Fi-AI-overlord-black-hole galactic-war-warp-speed-ness down the reader's throat as is physically possible. Instead this a human story and is a work of character writing, love, court politics and intrigue. As always there is Banks' sardonic humor and dry wit. While the story is told from a third person perspective and is partially detached as is typical of many of the Culture novels thus far, unlike those prior stories we get a lot in the way of characterization and emotion because thankfully this time the speaker is a person and not a drone.

This book really takes a magnifying glass to the society of a world potentially subject to Contact, the arm of the culture that “contacts” and eventually incorporates existing civilizations into Culture space. Thematically this book is still 100% Culture; we are tackling the same questions of morality and intervention, this time from the bottom of the pyramid rather than the top down approach used in the other books. We see the underbelly of the world of the Culture, and this book doesn't shy away from darker subjects, particularly issues surrounding the treatment of women in war and the subject of rape.

I'm not sure what happened in the two year gap between Inversions and Excession but this time around Banks' stepped up his game; one of our characters is a woman! In fact the strongest characters in this book were Vosill and Perrund, the Protector's concubine. Perrund delivers a chilling monologue concerning her treatment at the hands of a conquering force that I thought was the most alive/true-to-life these novels have ever gotten. In fact the strength of these characters does a lot to highlight the moral questions posed concerning contact: if in fact a foreign but guiding hand would prevent the kind of horrors visited on Perrund and others like her, would that good outweigh the bad that comes with forced change or the elimination of a planet's right to self-determination and rule?

I can see why fans of the series might rank this entry towards the bottom; it all but forgoes the “sci” part of sci-fi in favor of telling a grounded and compelling story, and some fans might really just be here for the big ships and the snarky drones. Personally I think I overdosed on that stuff after reading Excession. Had I known that the aptly titled Inversions, really was an inversion of the genre I don't think I would have been so keen to take a break from the series.

TL;DR: This book is really good, the sci-fi meter is set on low simmer.

March 15, 2023Report this review