Monday, May 19, 2014

Review of The Wasp Factory by Iain Banks



Perusing bookshops in Poland one finds fiction is categorized along the same genre lines as America or Britain.  They have horror, fantastyka, science fiction, kryminalny—all of which are readily recognizable to the English speaker.  There is one additional category, however, that I’d never seen before: sensacyjny.  Neither ‘sensual’ or ‘sensation’, the word, in this context, translates to ‘sensational’.  Not in the ‘amazing’ or ‘magnificent’ sense of the word, rather ‘sensationalist’ or ‘suddenness’, and it’s in that section one finds books that have certainly taken readers by storm, but less certainly are in possession of layers beyond outright popularity.  It’s here one finds Dan Brown, Stephanie Meyer, Stephen King, and, Iain Banks’ 1984 The Wasp Factory. (Though to be fair, Banks at least attempts an agenda.)

The novel is the story of Frank Cauldhame, a sixteen year old who is open to the reader about having killed three times in his youth.  Baldly psychotic, he goes into detail describing the fetishes and rituals of his life—the bones, skulls, candles, and totems that protect the small island in Scotland where he and his eccentric father call home.  If his own problems aren’t bad enough, Frank’s brother Eric is certified crazy, and at the outset of the story escapes the mental hospital.   Phone calls to Frank occurring sporadically thereafter, each one draws Eric closer and closer to home.  Little know to Frank, the ultimate conflict has been lying under his nose the whole time

A smash success, the version of The Wasp Factory I read indicates the book was re-printed 35 times up to 2011, and probably has been additionally in the time since.  And it’s easy to see why it’s popular.  Banks’ clear, direct style openly displays the mind of a psychotic in a situation that builds suspense admirably.  Frank’s mind a bizarre labyrinth of paranoia, normalcy, and sadism, one reads with appall the details of his behavior, yet keeps reading for the compelling heightening of suspense.  Banks scattering hints as to the reality behind the Cauldhames’ less than conventional family throughout Frank’s account, by the time the reader arrives at the grand reveal, they don’t know what to expect—the suspense at max. 

But for the quality storytelling and plot structuring, The Wasp Factory does indeed remain sensationalist fiction.  Banks’ himself pointing out in the preface the failure of the story to accomplish what he wanted to accomplish, there is little of value to the conclusion, and indeed, from certain standpoints, the logic which threads back through the story leads only to wisps of relevancy.  This is not to say the story is worthless, delving into the mind of a psychotic having not benefit to society, only that cleverness in plotting gets a writer so far, meaningful themes and thought-provoking material, much further.  Like a cloud floating through the air, it’s oh so easy to lay back and watch it float by overhead.  A little bit of high pressure, however, and it dries up, leaving nothing.

In the end, The Wasp Factory is a gripping read—and I don’t often use the word gripping on this blog.  Banks digs into the head of a teenage Ted Kazynski in calm, creepy fashion, revealing the mind of a psychotic as he goes about his sacralized life.  The macabre abound, Banks’ narrative is as focused as his prose.  Neither beautiful or ugly, it lays bare a sinister world that sucks the reader in.  Beyond a flash piece of entertainment, however, the book has little to offer.  Sensationalism it is.  (How this book has never been made into a movie is beyond me.)

4 comments:

  1. Banks is the only author whose entire work I adore. Each piece resonates some part of my brain, be it the macabre or the poignant. I appreciate Wasp Factory for the personal snapshot or the "Life as it is for..." perspective. A story with "wisps of relevancy" is something I can savor, as it reflects the irrelevancy of so much is our lives. Plans for other Banks' fiction?

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    1. I have had a copy of The Hydrogen Sonata sitting on my shelf for some time now, but I can't bring myself to read it knowing it will be the last original Culture novel I'll ever read. I'm waiting for the moment it just feels right. Regarding Banks' work without the M., I've read a few novels, but most before I started the blog, so I'm only slowly getting around to writing the reviews in retrospect - The Wasp Factory an example. The flood of reviews the past couple of months is due to an effort to cover the books I read before the blog. I also have a few others sitting on my shelf to be read. Banks' himself, as I guess you're aware, considers The Bridge his best work, and like The Hydrogen Sonata is waiting that moment it just feels right. I also look forward to the day I decide to re-read the Culture novels...

      Any of his mainstream works you would recommend I read sooner rather than later?

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  2. I don't think Frank actually killed anyone though. He is as unreliable as narrators go. The kids died, but all the deaths are really seem accidental, and Frank only puts himself as the actor for his fantasies.

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    1. It's a possibility, yes, with no real way to be 100% certain either way...

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