Product Code Database
Example Keywords: nintendo -produce $59-153
   » » Wiki: Iain Banks
Tag Wiki 'Iain Banks'.
Tag

Iain Menzies Banks (; 16 February 1954 – 9 June 2013) was a Scottish author, writing as Iain Banks and as Iain M. Banks. His books have been adapted for theatre, radio, and television. In 2008, named Banks in their list of the 50 greatest British writers since 1945.

Banks began writing full time after the success of his debut novel The Wasp Factory (1984), which has since sold over a million copies and been translated into 80 languages; in 2016, it was named the second-best Scottish novel of all time in a public poll by the . His first science fiction book, (1987), marked the start of the , consisting of eight further novels.

In April 2013, Banks revealed he had inoperable cancer and was unlikely to live beyond a year. He died on 9 June 2013.


Early life
Banks was born in , , to a mother who was a professional and a father who was an officer in the Admiralty. An only child, he lived in North Queensferry until the age of nine, near the naval dockyards in , where his father was based. The family then moved to due to his father's work. When someone introduced him to science fiction by giving him by Reginald Alec Martin, he continued reading the series, which encouraged him to write science fiction himself. Banks attended Gourock and Greenock High Schools. From 1972 to 1975, Banks studied English, , and at the University of Stirling.

After graduation, Banks took a succession of jobs that left him free to write in the evenings. These supported his writing throughout his twenties and allowed him to take long breaks between contracts, during which time he travelled through and . During this period, he worked as an 'Expediter Analyser' (a kind of procurement clerk), a testing technician for the British Steel Corporation, and a costing clerk for a law firm in London's .


Career

Writing career
Banks took up writing at the age of 11. He completed a first novel, The Hungarian Lift-Jet, at 16 and a second, TTR (also entitled The Tashkent Rambler) in his first year at Stirling University in 1972.
(2018). 9781476620404, McFarland. .
Though he saw himself mainly as a science fiction author, his publishing problems led him to pursue mainstream fiction. His first published novel The Wasp Factory, appeared in 1984, when he was thirty. After the success of The Wasp Factory, Banks began to write full time. His editor at Macmillan, James Hale, advised him to write a book a year, which he agreed to do.

His second novel Walking on Glass followed in 1985, then The Bridge in 1986, and in 1987 , which was later broadcast as a series on BBC Radio 4. His first published science fiction book, , emerged in 1987 and was the first of several in the acclaimed . Banks cited Robert A. Heinlein, , Arthur C. Clarke, , M. John Harrison and as influences. The Crow Road, published in 1992, was adapted as a BBC television series. Banks continued to write both science fiction and mainstream works. In 2004, Banks wrote (subtitled In Search of the Perfect Dram), a travel book of Banks's visits to the single malt distilleries of Scotland in search of the finest whisky, including his musings on other subjects such as roads, cars and politics.

Banks published work under two names. His parents had named him "Iain Menzies Banks", but his father mistakenly omitted the middle name when registering his son. Banks still used the middle name and submitted The Wasp Factory for publication as "Iain M. Banks". Banks's editor inquired about the possibility of omitting the 'M' as it appeared "too fussy" and the potential existed for confusion with Rosie M. Banks, a romantic novelist in the novels by P. G. Wodehouse; Banks agreed to the omission. After three mainstream novels, Banks's publishers agreed to publish his first science fiction novel Consider Phlebas. To create a distinction between the mainstream and the science fiction, Banks suggested returning the 'M' to his name, which was then used in all of his science fiction works. Banks was due to be a guest of honour at the 2014 World Science Fiction Convention, Loncon 3 but died the previous year.

By his death in June 2013, Banks had published 26 novels. His final novel The Quarry appeared in June 2013, the month of his death published posthumously as his 27th novel. His final work, a poetry collection, appeared in February 2015. In an interview in January 2013, he also mentioned he had the plot idea for another novel in the Culture series, which would most likely have been his next book and was planned for publication in 2014. Banks wrote in various categories, but had said that he enjoyed science fiction most.

In February 2018, a project to publish Banks's unseen early drawings, maps and sketches from the Culture universe alongs with his writings and notes on the setting was underway. In 2021, the delayed single volume of The Culture: Notes and Drawings was cancelled and replaced with two separate volumes: a landscape artbook of The Culture: The Drawings and a companion volume containing notes, excerpts and new text from . The Culture: The Drawings was released on 7 November 2023, while the still-untitled companion volume was scheduled for late 2024.


Radio and television
Banks was the subject of The Strange Worlds of Iain Banks South Bank Show (1997), a TV documentary that examined his mainstream writing, and was an in-studio guest for the final episode of 's Rocket Science radio show, broadcast on BBC Radio 6 Music. An audio version of The Business, set to contemporary music, arranged by , was broadcast in October 1999 on Galaxy Fm as the tenth Urban Soundtracks. Banks's The State of the Art, adapted for radio by , was broadcast on BBC Radio 4 in 2009 with Nadia Molinari producing and directing. In 1998 Espedair Street was dramatised as a serial for Radio 4, presented by in the style of a Radio 1 documentary.

In 2011 Banks featured on the BBC Radio 4 programme Saturday Live. Banks reaffirmed his atheism in this appearance, explaining death as an important "part of the totality of life" that should be treated realistically instead of feared.

Banks appeared on the BBC television programme Question Time, a show that features political discussion. In 2006 he captained a team of writers to victory in a special series of 's . Banks also won a 2006 edition of 's Celebrity Mastermind; the author selected "Malt whisky and the distilleries of Scotland" as his specialist subject.

His final interview was with , broadcast on BBC Two Scotland as Iain Banks: Raw Spirit, on 12 June 2013.

BBC One Scotland and BBC Two broadcast an adaptation of his novel in June 2015.


Theatre
Banks was involved in the stage production The Curse of Iain Banks, written by Maxton Walker and performed at the festival in 1999. Banks collaborated frequently with its soundtrack composer , for instance on a song collection they co-composed as a tribute to the fictional band Frozen Gold from Banks's novel Espedair Street. Lloyd also scored for a spoken word and music production of his novel The Bridge, which Banks himself voiced and which featured a cast of 40 musicians, released on CD by Codex Records in 1996. Lloyd recorded Banks for including in the play as a disembodied voice of himself in one of the cast member's dreams. Lloyd explained his collaboration with Banks on their first versions of Espedair Street (later versions being dated between 2005 and 2013) in a Guardian article prior to the opening of The Curse of Iain Banks:

When he Banks first played them to me, I think he was worried that they might not be up to scratch (some of them dated back to 1973 and had never been heard). He needn't have worried. They're fantastic. We're slaving away to get the songs to the stage where we can go into the studio and make a demo. Iain bashes out melodies on his state-of-the-art Apple Mac in Edinburgh and sends them down to me in Chester where I put them onto my Atari.


Politics
Banks's political stance has been termed "left of centre" and in 2002 he endorsed the Scottish Socialist Party.

He was an Honorary Associate of the National Secular Society and a Distinguished Supporter of the Humanist Society Scotland. As a signatory to the Declaration of Calton Hill, he supported Scottish independence. In November 2012, Banks backed the campaign group emerging from the Radical Independence Conference held in that month. He opined that the independence movement was marked by cooperation: "Scots just seem to be more than the consensus expressed by the UK population as a whole."

In late 2004, Banks joined a group of UK politicians and media figures campaigning to have Prime Minister impeached after the 2003 invasion of Iraq. In protest, he cut up his passport and posted it to 10 Downing Street. In a interview, Banks explained that his passport protest occurred after he had "abandoned the idea of crashing my Land Rover through the gates of Fife dockyard, after spotting the guys armed with machine guns." Banks relayed his concerns about the Iraq invasion in his book and through the protagonist Alban McGill in the novel The Steep Approach to Garbadale, who confronts another character with arguments of a similar kind.

In 2010, Banks called for a cultural and educational boycott of Israel after the Gaza flotilla raid incident. In a letter to The Guardian newspaper, Banks said he had instructed his agent to turn down any further book translation deals with Israeli publishers:

Appeals to reason, international law, U. N. resolutions and simple human decency mean – it is now obvious – nothing to Israel... I would urge all writers, artists and others in the creative arts, as well as those academics engaging in joint educational projects with Israeli institutions, to consider doing everything they can to convince Israel of its moral degradation and ethical isolation, preferably by simply having nothing more to do with this outlaw state.

An extract from Banks's contribution to the written collection Generation Palestine: Voices from the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions Movement, entitled "Our People", appeared in The Guardian in the wake of the author's cancer revelation. The extract conveys the author's support for the Boycott, Divestment and Sanctions (BDS) campaign issued by a Palestinian civil society against Israel until the country complies with what it holds are international law and Palestinian rights. This commenced in 2005 and applies lessons from Banks's experience with South Africa's era. The continuation of Banks's boycott of Israeli publishers for the sale of rights to his novels was confirmed in the extract and Banks further explained, "I don't buy Israeli-sourced products or food, and my partner and I try to support Palestinian-sourced products wherever possible."


Personal life
Banks met his first wife Annie in London before the 1984 release of his first book. They lived in in the south of England, then split up in 1988. Banks returned to and dated another woman for two years. Iain and Annie were reconciled a year later and they moved to Fife. They were married in Hawaii in 1992, but in 2005, after 15 years of marriage, they separated.

In 1998 Banks was in a near-fatal accident when his car rolled off the road. In February 2007, Banks sold his extensive car collection, including a 3.2-litre , a Porsche 911 Turbo, a 3.8-litre Jaguar Mark II, a 5-litre BMW M5 and a daily-use diesel Land Rover Defender, whose power he had boosted by about 50 per cent. All these Banks exchanged for a Lexus RX 400h hybrid – later replaced by a diesel , and said in future he would fly only in emergencies.

In April 2012 Banks became the "Acting Honorary Non-Executive Figurehead President Elect pro tem (trainee)" of the Science Fiction Book Club based in London. The title was his creation and on 3 October 2012 Banks accepted a T-shirt inscribed with it.

From 1991 Banks lived in North Queensferry on the north side of the Firth of Forth, with his girlfriend Adele Hartley, an author and founder of the Dead by Dawn film festival. She and Banks met in 1989, and married on 29 March 2013 after he asked her to "do me the honour of becoming my widow."


Illness and death
On 3 April 2013, Banks revealed that he had been diagnosed with gallbladder cancer and was unlikely to live beyond a year. He stated he would be withdrawing from all public engagements and that The Quarry would be his last novel. The dates of publication of The Quarry were brought forward at Banks's request, to 20 June 2013 in the UK and 25 June 2013 in the US and Canada.
(2017). 9780316281843, Hachette Book Group. .
He died on 9 June 2013.


Remembrance and tribute
Banks's publisher called him "an irreplaceable part of the literary world". This was reaffirmed by fellow Scottish author and friend since secondary school : his death "left a large gap in the Scottish literary scene as well as the wider English-speaking world." British author wrote, "One of the giants of 20th and 21st century Scottish literature has left the building." Other authors including , , Alastair Reynolds and also paid tribute in blogs and elsewhere.; quotes from Ian Rankin, Val MacDermid, and Neil Gaiman

The asteroid 5099 Iainbanks was named after him shortly after his death. On 23 January 2015, 's CEO named two of the firm's autonomous spaceport drone ships Just Read The Instructions and Of Course I Still Love You, after ships in Banks's novel The Player of Games. Another, A Shortfall of Gravitas, began construction in 2018. This refers to the ship Experiencing A Significant Gravitas Shortfall, first mentioned in Look to Windward.

The Red Virgin and the Vision of Utopia, the 2016 graphic biography of by Mary M. Talbot and , is "Dedicated to the memory of Iain (M) Banks, friend and sorely missed creator of socialist utopias."

(2026). 9781506700892, Dark Horse Books.

Empire Games, the seventh book in The Merchant Princes series by published in 2017, is dedicated "For Iain M. Banks, who painted a picture of a better way."

(2026). 9780765337566, Macmillan.

On 13 May 2019, the Five Deeps Expedition broke the deepest ocean dive record in the DSV Limiting Factor. The support ship was named DSSV Pressure Drop. Both vessels were named after ships in the Culture series, which is much admired by the explorer , also the financial sponsor behind Limiting Factors design and construction. They also have landers named "Flere," "Skaff," and "Closp," named after Culture drones.


Awards and nominations
Iain Banks received the following literary awards and nominations:


Publications

Non-SF works
Banks's non-SF work comprises fourteen novels and one non-fiction book. Many of his novels contain elements of autobiography, and feature various locations in his native Scotland.

Fiction
  • The Wasp Factory (1984). London: Macmillan. .
  • Walking on Glass (1985). London: Macmillan. .
  • The Bridge (1986). London: Macmillan. .
  • (1987). London: Macmillan. . Adapted for radio in 1998 (directed by Dave Batchelor).
  • (1989). London: Macmillan. .
  • The Crow Road (1992). London: Scribners. . Adapted for BBC TV in 1996 (directed by ).
  • Complicity (1993). London: Little, Brown Book Group. . Filmed in 2000 (directed by ); retitled Retribution for its US DVD/video release.
  • Whit (1995). London: Little, Brown Book Group. .
  • A Song of Stone (1997). London: Abacus. .
  • The Business (1999). London: Little, Brown Book Group. .
  • Dead Air (2002). London: Little, Brown Book Group. .
  • The Steep Approach to Garbadale (2007). London: Little, Brown Book Group. .
  • (2012). London: Little, Brown Book Group. . Adapted for TV for broadcast in 2015 (directed by Charles Martin).
  • The Quarry (2013). London: Little, Brown Book Group. .


Non-fiction


Science fiction
Banks wrote thirteen SF novels, nine of which were part of the , and a short story collection called The State of the Art (1991), which includes some stories set in the same universe. These works focus upon characters that are usually on the margins of the Culture, a . Originally posted on rec.arts.sf newsgroup. In the same universe are other civilizations, which the Culture sometimes attempts to influence or "contact", occasionally resulting in conflict.
(2019). 9780748110032, Little, Brown Book Group. .
The culture has achieved utopia by handing control of all of their worlds and ships over to artificial intelligences referred to as "Minds".


The Culture
  1. (1987). London: Macmillan.
  2. The Player of Games (1988). London: Macmillan.
  3. The State of the Art novella (1989). Willimantic,CT: Ziesing. – also included below in short fiction collections, but included here because it is considered part of the Culture series.
  4. Use of Weapons (1990). London: Orbit.
  5. (1996). London: Orbit.
  6. Inversions (1998). London: Orbit.
  7. Look to Windward (2000). London: Orbit.
  8. Matter (2008). London: Orbit.
  9. (2010). London: Orbit.
  10. The Hydrogen Sonata (2012). London: Orbit.


The Culture reference books
  • The Culture: The Drawings (2023). London: Orbit.


Other novels
  • Against a Dark Background (1993). London: Orbit.
  • (1994). London: Orbit.
  • (2004). London: Orbit.
  • Transition (2009). London: Little, Brown Book Group. . (Published in the United States as Iain M. Banks.)


Short fiction collections
  • The State of the Art (1991). London: Orbit.
    • Includes three short works set in universe. It also includes works of fiction more characteristic of Banks's writing published as Iain Banks. A radio version of the title story was transmitted by Radio 4 in 2009.
  • The Spheres (Birmingham Science Fiction Group, 2010)
    • Includes 'The Spheres', excised from the original draft of Transition; and 'The Secret Courtyard', excised from Matter. Limited edition of 500, to mark .


Introductions
Banks wrote introductions for works by other writers including:
  • (1988) by M. John Harrison, the Unwin edition, .
  • The Adventures of Luther Arkwright: Book 3, Götterdämmerung (1989) by from Proutt Publishing, .
  • The Orbit Science Fiction Yearbook Three (1990) edited by David S. Garnett, .
  • The Human Front (2001) by , the PS Publishing edition, (hbk) and (pbk).


Further reading
  • Simone Caroti: The Culture Series of Iain M. Banks: A Critical Introduction, McFarland, April 2015, .
  • Nick Hubble, Esther MacCallum-Stewart and Joseph Norman (eds.): The Science Fiction of Iain M. Banks, Gylphi Limited, January 2018, .
  • : Iain M. Banks, University of Illinois Press, May 2017, .
  • The Science Fiction Foundation have published an analysis of Ken MacLeod's work titled The True Knowledge of Ken MacLeod (; 2003; ), edited by Andrew M. Butler and . As well as critical essays and material on MacLeod, it includes MacLeod's introduction to the German edition of Banks's and essays comparing the works of the two authors.


External links

: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,
Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time