Reviews and Comments

Ben Harris-Roxas

ben_hr@outside.ofa.dog

Joined 2 years, 1 month ago

Researcher and educator from Sydney, Australia. You’ll usually find me on the forgotten parts of the web.

My ratings ★ Not recommended ★★ Not for me, but may be okay for you? ★★★ Good ★★★★ Very good, recommended ★★★★★ Exceptional, couldn't put it down

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The State of the Art 2 stars

The first ever collection of Iain Banks’s short fiction, this volume includes the acclaimed novella, …

Disappointing within the context of the Culture series

2 stars

Content warning Non-plot description of a story’s setting

The Player of Games (Paperback, 1989, Orbit) 4 stars

The Culture - a human/machine symbiotic society - has thrown up many great Game Players, …

One of his best

4 stars

A well-constructed meditation on games, inequality and brutality, and utopia itself.

I read this 20+ years ago and remembered most of it – itself a measure of quality. It’s interesting that Banks suggests the Culture is only comprehensible by those outside it. Within the Culture docile, pampered beings exist worry-free lives like goldfish in a tank. The pacing and tone are masterful. What a writer!

This book probably needs to be understood in the context it was written. In 1988 the Soviet Union was still extant, and the U.S. and U.K. probably did (and certainly still does) resemble to Empire of Azad much more than the Culture. It’s quite a subversive work.

Consider Phlebas (EBook, 2009, Orbit) 3 stars

The war raged across the galaxy. Billions had died, billions more were doomed. Moons, planets, …

Remains imaginative, overreaching, flawed, and propulsive

3 stars

Content warning Allusions to the events and arc of the novel, no spoilers about the ending

Noumenon (Hardcover, 2017, HarperCollins Publishers, HarperVoyager) 2 stars

With nods to Arthur C. Clarke's Rama series and the real science of Neal Stephenson's …

Shaggy space dog

2 stars

Profoundly disappointing and directionless. The characterisation is thin, the plot moves but seemingly erratically, and overall it’s bereft of ideas. This is the first in a series—I won’t be continuing.

Ten Planets (Paperback, 2023, Graywolf Press) 3 stars

A collection of fanciful, philosophical science fictions by “one of Mexico’s finest novelists” (Vulture).

The …

Bumpy

3 stars

Disappointingly uneven, though I appreciated the broader perspective that hadn’t been through the very narrow filter of the limited number of English language short fiction publishers.

Creation Lake (2024, Scribner) 5 stars

A new novel about a seductive and cunning American woman who infiltrates an anarchist collective …

The best book I've read in years

5 stars

Creation Lake is a spy novel, ostensibly, but it's immediately more than that. It's an examination of French politics and class, the "spy cops" scandal, and the demise of Neanderthals.

The book follows Sadie, a corporate spy who's detached to the point of sociopathy. But her wry observations are compelling. She's amoral, brutal and unsentimental, but also smart and amusing. She draws you in though you know she cannot be trusted, even as a narrator.

Rachel Kushner seems unusual in the context of contemporary American literature for her ability to weave global sociopolitical observations into narratives that switch back and further between contemporary issues and historical events.

Kushner's prose is both concise and poetic where it needs to be. She shows real skill in capturing human experiences against historical timescales. What's particularly impressive about this book is Kushner's sharp handling of both time and space. She weaves together the contemporary, …

Creation Lake (2024, Scribner) 5 stars

A new novel about a seductive and cunning American woman who infiltrates an anarchist collective …

Kushner is a hell of a writer. She's created one of the least likeable narrative POV characters ever, yet I feel compelled to read on. The attention to detail and her clear attention to structure and pacing are great.