I assume like
most bibliophiles, there are a few authors that touch that nerve of
pure enjoyment and satisfaction inside. Their stories fill me with
an inner sense of delight at the places, characters, and emotions
described, and leave me feeling a little high upon completion—wanting
more but wonderfully gratified with what I have. And completion is,
unfortunately, a necessity. While we may like to be forever in those
places and among those characters, the last page inevitably turns.
And for authors who have passed, so too do oeuvres have a last page;
at some point in time I will have read everything by an author and
face the reality of not being able to embark on any virgin
experience.
And thus it
is with a few authors I have patiently let their final unread book
sit on the shelf for years, waiting for the moment that feels right
to enter upon that last bit of glory. With Iain Banks’ The
Hydrogen Sonata (2012) a couple
of weeks ago the moment felt right. And so, with mixed feelings, I
dived in for my last, virgin experience in the Culture. I have
emerged upon the last page to confirm delayed gratification is a real
thing.
The
Hydrogen Sonata is the story of
the Gzilt and their Subliming—or at least intentions to Sublime.
Having achieved what they believe the apex of their civilization, as
a group they have decided to forego their mortal coils and enter
digital rapture among the Culture. Several greedy alien races
waiting on the wings to swoop in on the remains of their civilization
once they’ve Sublimed, the entire process doesn’t go as smoothly
as planned. Vyr Cossont, a retired Culture attache and now civilian
among the Gzilt, is practicing on her eleven-string undecagon one day
when emergency contact is made: her presence is urgently required by
Gzilt high command. Certain warships having been destroyed for
inexplicable reasons at the edges of Gzilt space, only her personal
knowledge of one of the people at the center of the mystery will help
solve it. Thus, foregoing retirement, Cossont sets out to uncover
the mystery and try to set things back in line so the day of
Subliming can go smoothly.
Banks strings
out the mystery of who and why is interfering with Gzilt Subliming in
subtle, almost non-mystery fashion. Shifting scene and place to add
a situation or character vital to the overarching story, there is a
“grand reveal” upon the conclusion, but by the time the story
reaches the final pages, there is in fact only one last nugget to be
revealed (and it’s very Banks-ian). The rest of the machinations
having been steadily and interestingly fed to the reader through a
concatenation of singular, engaging set pieces—Banks’
trademark—the journey to said reveal is the real joy.
Coincidentally
or otherwise, The Hydrogen
Sonata’s primary theme of
transcending mortality was published just months prior to Banks’
own passing. While I incline toward coincidence given the
predominance of dark themes in much of Banks’ oeuvre, there
nevertheless is a complementary ring to the story of a society
looking to leave behind its state in the Real for a place in the
higher dimensions of space/time. Highlighting one of the holes in
democratic political theory in the process (what if your society
voted to transcend but you yourself did not want to), Banks has his
usual amount of dark fun with the theme, managing to work in a number
of our virtues and vices in relatable, and at time, humorous ways.
While I
enjoyed Surface Detail,
the Culture novel published prior, I found it to be one of the
weakest of Banks’ far-future efforts, thus leading me to wonder
whether a decline in quality was starting to set in after eight
voyages through Mindship space. My worries were misplaced. The
Hydrogen Sonata proves Surface
Detail a minor blip that,
unfortunately, will have no more blips of any size. Theme fully
cohesive (even playing into Banks’ wheelhouse, one could easily
argue), the humor sophisticated, dark, and playful, and the story arc
as epic yet personal as has been the case with past Culture novels,
this latest and last comes easily recommended.
Thus, while I
am a little sad to have read the last Iain Banks’ Culture novel,
I’m immensely glad to have had the privilege of encountering and
experiencing them at all. Nothing lasts forever. Now, Jack Vance’s
Alastor trilogy stares at me from the shelf? How long to delay that
last bit of virgin gratification?
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