Look to Windward

Look to Windward

infobox Book |
name = Look to Windward
orig title =
translator =


image_caption =
author = Iain M. Banks
cover_artist =
country = Scotland
language = English
series = The Culture
genre = Science fiction novel
publisher = Orbit Books
release_date = 2000
media_type = Print (Hardback & Paperback)
pages = 357 pp
isbn = ISBN 1-85723-981-4
preceded_by = The Business
followed_by = Dead Air

"Look to Windward" is a science fiction novel by Scottish writer Iain M. Banks, first published in 2000. It is Banks' sixth published novel to feature The Culture.

Plot introduction

After an unsuccessful intervention into its politics by the Culture, the Chelgrian civilisation collapsed into a civil war which killed five billion Chelgrians. Some years later, a faction of Chelgrians plots revenge. Mahrai Ziller is a Chelgrian composer living in exile on a Culture Orbital; Major Quilan, a Chelgrian veteran, is sent to the Orbital, officially to persuade him to return.

Plot summary

Despite the passage of time, Major Quilan still suffers grief and bereavement from the death of his wife, killed during the Chelgrian civil war when both were soldiers. Offered the chance to avenge the Chel, Quilan is inducted into a plot to strike back at the Culture. To guide him on the way, the mind of a long-dead Chelgrian general is emplaced into his 'soulkeeper', a device normally used to protect and store its owner's personality in case of death. His memory selectively blanked until he reaches his target, Quilan is then sent to Masaq Orbital ostensibly to persuade Ziller to return to his native Chel.

On Masaq, Ziller lives in self-imposed exile, having renounced his privileged position in Chel's caste system. An accomplished composer, he has been commissioned to compose music to mark the anniversary of the Idiran-Culture War. Upon hearing of Quilan's visit, and his reason for travel, Ziller scrupulously avoids him, reluctant to return to a civilisation that repels him.

Meanwhile, the GSV "Lasting Damage", now the Mind controlling Masaq Orbital, assists Ziller in the preparations for the performance of his composition. However, it has its own secrets stretching back to the Idiran-Culture War, and wrestles with its own demons over its role then.

The end of the novel shows the hard and vengeful side to the Culture, as they unleash a bloody retribution against the Chelgrian priest who was responsible in the form of an E-Dust Assassin. It is hinted that the terrorist attack might have been masterminded by another Involved race, or even by elements of the Culture; Minds who feel that the Culture has gone soft and needs a wake-up call. An epilogue set hundreds of millions of years (approximately one Galactic year) after the events in the novel hints at the (extreme) long-term fate of the Culture.

Literary significance & criticism

In some respects it serves as a loose sequel to the first Culture novel, "Consider Phlebas" : the GSV "Lasting Damage" fought in the Idiran-Culture War, and Ziller specially composes a work to commemorate the arrival of light from a supernova triggered during the war. Both titles are derived from a couplet in T. S. Eliot's poem, "The Waste Land" (which appears both in this work and "Consider Phlebas" as an epigraph):

Gentile or Jew
O you who turn the wheel and look to windward,
Consider Phlebas, who was once handsome and tall as you.

There are references to the Culture novel immediately previous to this one, "Excession", where the GCU "Grey Area" is referred to, and is also possible that Estray Lassils (in her younger, four-armed days) was one of the lovers of the Ah-Forget-It-Tendency SC Agent Leffid Ispanteli, thus placing the events of this novel fully 200-300 years in the immediate past.

This book deals with the themes of exile, bereavement, religious justification of mass violence against humanity/sentience in war, and the mores associated with life within a technologically and energetically unlimited anarchist utopia. The book also notably deals with the Sublimed and with their construction of a heaven.

Many contemporary literary journals reviewed "Look to Windward" favourably, and critics consider the author as one of the prime motivators for the return to the mainstream of contemporary UK fiction and science fiction.The book's dedication reads: "For the Gulf War Veterans".

Bibliography

"Look to Windward", Iain M. Banks, London: Orbit, 2000, ISBN 1-85723-981-4 (paperback), ISBN 1-85723-981-4 (C-format), ISBN 1-85723-969-5 (hardback)

External links

* [http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/sciencefiction/0,6121,362918,00.html Guardian review]
* [http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9801E4D6113AF934A35753C1A9679C8B63 New York Times review]
* [http://www.sfsite.com/11b/lw93.htm SF Site review]
* [http://www.strangehorizons.com/2000/20001218/look_to_windward.shtml Strange Horizons review]


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