Monday, 23 May 2016

Whit by Iain Banks

I love Iain Bank’s books but I wouldn’t recommend them all because of their challenging content. His books are often on reading lists for literature courses for older students. They usually involve stories about dysfunctional families in Banks’ native Scotland. If you treasure happy family life, his books are probably not for you. In this case, the story is told by a 19-year old woman called Isis Whit (after the Egyptian goddess, not the recent terror movement). Her grandfather founded a religious cult in odd circumstances and all of the family are members. They live in a closed community near Stirling. She is sent into the outside world on a mission. It is a story about a young woman discovering herself, finding that she has been lied to and about what she does with that knowledge. It tells of how she copes with being let down by people she should have been able to trust. Of Iain Banks’ books, I have found it one of the most sympathetic and accessible.