Transition (novel)

Transition  

First edition cover
Author(s) Iain Banks
Country Scotland
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Little, Brown and Company
Publication date 3 September 2009
Media type Print (Hardback)
Pages 416 pp
ISBN 0316731072
OCLC Number 373479614
Preceded by Matter
Followed by Surface Detail

Transition is a novel by Iain Banks, first published in 2009. The American edition gives the author's name as "Iain M. Banks", the name Banks uses for his science fiction work.

Contents

Background

In an interview with The Guardian Banks explained what he was aiming for, "With Transition, I wanted to prove something. I wanted to show I could do something like The Bridge again because until now, that has been my favourite."[1]

While he has insisted it wasn't a commentary on American imperialism ("I don't think it's about America per se; it's more about power and the way that it is wielded in general") he does admit that the character The Philosopher is a way of addressing the Abu Ghraib torture and prisoner abuse.[1]

Plot summary

Set between the dismantling of the Berlin Wall and the 2008 financial crisis, Transition centres on a shadowy organisation called 'The Concern' (also known as 'L'Expédience'), and how the workings of this organisation affect the lives of the novel's multiple narrators and characters. Banks uses the many-worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics theory to imagine "infinitudes" of parallel realities, between which The Concern's agents–known as Transitionaries–can "flit", intervening in events to produce what The Concern sees as beneficial outcomes for that world. Transitioning, or flitting, is only possible for people with a predisposed talent for such movement, who may only flit after ingesting a mysterious drug called 'septus'. When a Transitionary flits into another world, he or she temporarily takes control of the body of an existing inhabitant of that world, along with some of that body's residual idiosyncrasies (such as personality disorders and sexual preferences).

Main characters

The Transitionary

Referred to in section headings as "The Transitionary", the character's name is Temudjin Oh. Like the majority of The Concern's operatives, he naturally inhabits a version of Earth called Calbefraques, which is an "Open" world - one in which the presence of the many worlds is commonly known about and accepted. Temudjin, or Tem, is one of The Concern's most skilled and prized Transitionaries, although much mistrusted by the organisation's de facto head, Madame d'Ortolan, owing to his formerly close relationship with a renegade Concern operative, Mrs Mulverhill.

Patient 8262

A former Transitionary, now in hiding in a far-flung reality, posing as a patient in a hospital.

Madame d'Ortolan

The ruthless, sexually predatory and ancient de facto head of The Concern's Central Council. More than two hundred years old, Madame d'Ortolan has been accorded the honour of being allowed to transition permanently into a younger body when her older one is near death. An unstable genius, she is deeply worried about the influence of Mrs Mulverhill on the Concern's activities.

Adrian Cubbish

A City trader in the reality of our own Earth, Adrian is, at first, apparently not connected to the other characters or The Concern. He is a former drug dealer and arch-capitalist, who becomes extremely wealthy from his work as a trader, before setting up his own hedge fund.

Mrs Mulverhill

A former member of The Concern, a highly talented Transitionary and erstwhile teacher at The Concern's University of Practical Talents. She believes that the ruling elite of the Concern has ulterior motives and a hidden agenda for the actions they perform. After forming a close relationship with Temudjin Oh, she disappears, causing Madame d'Ortolan to become deeply paranoid about her motives and intentions.

Mrs Mulverhill theorises that M. Ortolan is motivated, along with a need to control the Council (and therefore humanity), to ensure that none of the many Earth worlds are contaminated by alien contact. Her instructions to the transitionaries to kill, supposedly to eliminate evil workers, are suspected by Mrs. Mulverhill as being the means of eliminating the possibility of alien contact for Earth in all its realities (or otherwise of covering up this motive). In the final scene, M. 'O' appears to accept this accusation.

The Philosopher

A torturer and former employee of the police and army. The Philosopher likes to imagine himself as an ethical and thoughtful man - hence his sobriquet - and claims to take no pleasure in his work, seeing it only as a necessary evil.

Reception

Transition was reviewed by Patrick Ness for The Guardian and he suggested the book has a "weird half-heartedness." He concludes "this is an airport novel, something for the flight from JFK to Eafrow. You're welcome to take that for as much of a recommendation as you choose."[2]

Unused material

In 2010, an unused section of the first draft was published by the Birmingham Science Fiction group as the short story 'The Spheres' in a booklet of the same name. The publication was a limited edition of 500 to mark Novacon 40.[3]

References

External links