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Iain BanksIain Banks
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BiographyIain Banks was born in Dunfermline, Fife, in Scotland in 1954 and was educated at Stirling University where he read English Literature, Philosophy and Psychology. He moved to London and lived in the south of England until 1988 when he returned to Fife where he now lives with his wife. He is almost unique in that he has achieved success in two genres: mainstream, literary fiction; and the science fiction books written under the name Iain M. Banks.    
  Genres (in alphabetical order)Fiction, Science-fiction, Short stories, Song lyrics     BibliographyThe Wasp Factory Macmillan, 1984 Walking on Glass Macmillan, 1985 The Bridge Macmillan, 1986 Consider Phlebas (as Iain M. Banks) Macmillan, 1987 Espedair Street Macmillan, 1987 The Player of Games (as Iain M. Banks) Macmillan, 1988 Canal Dreams Macmillan, 1989 The State of the Art (as Iain M. Banks) Macmillan, 1989 The Use of Weapons (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 1990 The Crow Road Scribners, 1992 Against a Dark Background (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 1993 Complicity Little, Brown, 1993 Feersum Endjinn (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 1994 Whit Little, Brown, 1995 Excession (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 1996 A Song of Stone Abacus, 1997 Inversions (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 1998 The Business Little, Brown, 1999 Look to Windward (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 2000 Dead Air Little, Brown, 2002 Raw Spirit: In Search of the Perfect Dram Century, 2003 Scottish Writers Talking II: In Interview (contributor) Tuckwell, 2003 The Algebraist (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 2004 The Steep Approach to Garbadale Little, Brown, 2007 Matter (as Iain M. Banks) Orbit, 2008 Transition Little, Brown, 2009  
  Prizes and awards2005 Hugo Award The Algebraist 2008 Catherine Maclean Prize (shortlist) The Steep Approach to Garbadale    
  Critical PerspectiveIain Banks is really two authors. One of them, Iain Banks, is best known for his classic, frequently macabre works of contemporary Scottish fiction, the other, Iain M. Banks, for his best selling works of science fiction. However, the differences between the two cannot be sustained for very long, as anyone who has enjoyed the futuristic dimensions of, for example, The Bridge (1986, by Iain Banks), or noted the many references to contemporary Scotland in the science fiction, will know. Indeed Banks’ latest novel, Transition (2009), is published in the UK and the US under, respectively, Iain Banks and Iain M. Banks, as if to further highlight the arbitrariness of any division in his work. Nevertheless, the kind of doubling up suggested by the self-conscious split in the author’s literary production is an illuminating way into thinking about the work of an author who is preoccupied with doubles and doppelgangers, returns and uncanny repetitions of various sorts. As the Scottish literary critic, Cairns Craig, helpfully summarises:
'In Banks’s novels Frank and Frances in The Wasp Factory represent a sexualized version of the double; in The Bridge, Orr knows he has an alternative life somewhere else that he is trying to reconnect with; in Espedair Street, Daniel Weir is “weird” precisely because he has come to live a double life, being an internationally famous rock star who poses as the caretaker of a converted Church in Glasgow; while in Canal Dreams Hisako Onada is a Jekyll-and-Hyde figure, both cellist and killer … The unresolved doubleness of Fergus’s behavior [in The Crow Road] is replicated in Whit, in which almost everyone is a double, acting out a concealed awareness of the distinctions between truth and fiction in their invented religion (Craig, 2002)'
As the comparison with Stevenson’s Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde would seem to imply here, Banks’s preoccupation with the double does not emerge out of the blue, but is part of a long tradition of modern Scottish writing that can be traced back to James Hogg’s Confessions of a Justified Sinner (1824).
Another boundary that Banks’s dual authorship tests is that between the categories of ‘high’ and popular fiction. In this context, Banks is either a striking success or a dramatic failure, depending on your perspective. Viewed from one position, Banks has been relatively unshackled by the sort of generic constraints and conventions that have held back some of his contemporaries, making him one of the most prolific contemporary writers in the UK, and one of the most read authors in the world. Banks’s two names have helped multiply his audience, while allowing the author to test and challenge the boundaries of literary genre. From another position, however, Banks’ crossover appeal has resulted in him being one of the most critically neglected of modern day writers. Critics like Janice Radway and Joe Moran are illuminating in this context, referring to writers who seem to move between mass readership and specialist audiences as producing a ‘scandal of the middlebrow’ in which the commercial success of the author renders them ‘illegitimate’ subjects for comfortable critical attention. Banks himself has noted his frustration with this in a recent interview with Ken Livingstone:
There is still a lot of snobbishness about it. There's an awful lot of people who did humanities at Oxbridge who are frightened of technology, and this is a genre that deals with technology and change, so it frightens them. My point has always been that, ever since the Industrial Revolution, science fiction has been the most important genre there is.'
However, for most readers it remains Banks’s earlier writing of the 1980s and early 1990s, notably The Wasp Factory (1984), Consider Phlebas (1987), The Crow Road (1992), and Complicity (1993), that captures the author’s bold imaginative vision best. The Wasp Factory and Complicity both offer uncompromising and unnerving portraits of serial killers before brutally dumping the reader’s expectations like a corpse in a canal. Similarly, The Crow Road centres on a perfect murder in an imaginary town in Argyll. All three novels unfold within a recognisably local, but by turns dark, deranged and damaged Scotland, and all three use a range of jarring cinematic devices such as flashback, to striking and sometimes disorienting effect.
Banks’ latest novel captures these sorts of aesthetic and generic crossovers perfectly in terms of both its content and title. Transition (2009), like The Bridge before it, dwells upon the transitory and transitional states between dualities either side of it. Unfolding between the fall of the Berlin Wall and the Collapse of the Twin Towers, Transition also moves deftly between a referential post-war world and the parallel universes of science fiction, between Iain Banks and Iain M. Banks, in what many critics are describing as an impressive return to form.
Dr James Procter  
  Author statement'I write because I love it, I enjoy it, I've spent most of my life trying to do it better, and I can make a living from it: beats a day job.'  
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