Ratings14
Average rating2.5
A European nation not unlike Bosnia: armed forces roam the lawless land where dark columns of smoke rise up from the surrounding farms and houses. The war is ending, perhaps ended. But for the castle and its occupants, a young lord and lady, the trouble is just beginning.
Fearing an invasion of soldiers, the amorous couple takes to the road with the other refugees, disguised in rags. But the brutal female lieutenant of an outlaw band of guerrillas has other ideas. Just hours into their escape, the fleeing aristocrats are delivered back to the castle, where, now prisoners in their own home, they become pawns in the lieutenant's dangerous game of desire, deceit, and death.
A Song of Stone demonstrates Iain Banks's unique ability to combine gripping narrative with a soaring, voyaging imagination. This noir fable confirms his reputation as the master of things dark and debauched. Singular, haunting, and viciously wry, A Song of Stone is a tour de force of contemporary fiction.
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I have no problem with its darkness, bleakness or unlikable MC - on the contrary, i constantly scour for these. The problem in literary: the writing is waaaay too pretentious, verbose, over-adjectival and over-flowing. This is neither scifi (as the very good written by the same author, as Iain M Banks) nor even fantasy.
It's simply Literary Fiction, the kind pronounced with capital letters by people needing to feel superior by reading uselessly overcomplicated books, just for the sake of feeling above ordinary readers.
It literary sucks.