Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Book Reviews of Consider Phlebas (Culture, Bk 1)

Consider Phlebas (Culture, Bk 1)
Consider Phlebas - Culture, Bk 1
Author: Iain M. Banks
ISBN-13: 9781857231380
ISBN-10: 1857231384
Publication Date: 1/1/2003
Pages: 467
Rating:
  • Currently 4.1/5 Stars.
 19

4.1 stars, based on 19 ratings
Publisher: Time Warner Books Uk
Book Type: Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

mazeface avatar reviewed Consider Phlebas (Culture, Bk 1) on + 66 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 7
Two civilizations are at war: the Idirans and the Culture. Horza, a shapechanger, serves as an agent for the Idirans. His next assignment is to retrieve a device created by the Culture called The Mind which has crashed landed and hidden itself on a desolate planet. How will Horza complete his mission, considering the planet is a frozen wasteland? Consider Phlebas is a hidden gem of space opera.

Iain M. Banks knows how to write the fast-paced action scene. One episode has Horza and a crew of mismatched mercenaries raiding a huge, dead spaceship floating around an object that resembles Larry Niven's Ringworld; during the raid, the ship crashes into a giant iceberg and the crew tries to escape with their world crashing around them. In another chapter, Horza flies a small spaceship through a larger ship's docking station; the result is a rip-roaring "car chase" scene that makes the reader want to duck his head.

Consider Phlebas contains a few things the reader might question. One, Horza is a likable character, but morally ambiguous. He kills innocent people without remorse. Two, the book contains a few chapters about a character named Fal 'Neegstra which interrupt the story and add nothing to the plot. Third, The last page of the book suggests that the story may not have even happened, but that is up to interpretation. If you read this book, read it for the guilty pleasure attained in loving space opera.

Overall, people who enjoyed Simmons's Hyperion or Vinge's A Fire Upon the Deep will enjoy Bank's Consider Phlebas.
SteveTheDM avatar reviewed Consider Phlebas (Culture, Bk 1) on + 204 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
You know what I want? Simpler worlds with more character development. This book wasn't it.

I'd picked up Consider Phlebas because I keep hearing about Bank's "Culture" novels, and so I thought I'd start at the beginning. Yawn. This is all plot, characters I don't care about, and a vaguely interesting galactic civilization that might be interesting if it was accessed in a different way.

3 of 5 stars.
althea avatar reviewed Consider Phlebas (Culture, Bk 1) on + 774 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Iain Banks' first Culture novel. It had some truly memorable disturbing moments! (eeewww! and it takes a lot to nauseate me!) But I like that.
CrazyaboutFantasy avatar reviewed Consider Phlebas (Culture, Bk 1) on + 49 more book reviews
Very entertaining. I like the characters and love the world-building. Could use a bit more story.
maura853 avatar reviewed Consider Phlebas (Culture, Bk 1) on + 542 more book reviews
Stands up well on rereading, 30 years after the late Blessed Iain M. first delighted up with his canny, rich and witty snapshots of life in the Culture, his post-scarcity, post-irony and post-Singularity society. The humanoids are just as angst-ridden, the planets just as bizarre and the AIs just as snarky as I remembered.

If I have one quibble, it's that there is some serious padding: there are one-and-a-half unnecessary chapters, and the final showdown in the abandoned tunnels beneath the ice-bound Planet of the Dead is ground out almost beyond endurance. But I don't blame Banks: the fashion in the 80s for SF novels was for doorstop length.