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Dead Air door Iain Banks
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Dead Air (origineel 2002; editie 2003)

door Iain Banks

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1,7002310,213 (3.25)64
Ken Nott is a devoutly contrarian, vaguely left-wing radio shock-jock living in London. After a wedding breakfast, people start dropping fruits from a balcony on to a deserted car park below. As they get carried away, dropping more, they're told a plane has just crashed into the World Trade Center.
Lid:engelcox
Titel:Dead Air
Auteurs:Iain Banks
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Trefwoorden:fiction, novel, unread

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Dead air door Iain Banks (2002)

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"Political correctness is what right-wing bigots call what everybody else calls being polite."

'Dead Air' is a cross between 'The Crow Road' and 'Complicity' and sees Iain Banks returning to familiar ground with his characters and plot.

Glaswegian Ken Nott is a devoutly left-wing contrarian shock jock working for Capital Live!, a London commercial radio station where he rants about everything from religion to gun control to congestion, taking pleasure in belittling his listeners and receiving death threats. The story opens in September 2001 when Ken is attending a party in London just as the Twin Towers are attacked. The story opens with a bang and basically accelerates through one man's political obsessions dropping Ken in some interesting situations involving death threats, women, drugs and live television along the way.

Ken isn't a particularly likeable character, he is a opinionated, drug-taking, self-centred lothario skipping from one sexual partner to another with little thought for the turmoil he leaves in his wake. The main story revolves around Ken’s affair with a gangland boss's wife. When Ken leaves an ill-advised telephone message on her home's answering machine his life starts to spiral out of control.

To tell you the truth at the end of this novel I wasn’t sure what it was actually about. OK, you see Ken bound up in some dodgy predicaments of his own making, from the deadly serious to the hilarious, but you don’t get a sense of a whole. It is well written, clever and funny with great characters and set scenes that made me laugh, I’m just not sure if it actually had a plot. We are simply dropped in to the middle of Ken’s life, we watch a few set scenes unfold that made me laugh, then it is over and everything carries on.

Don’t get me wrong I'm a big fan off the author's works even if they aren't for the morally squeamish and perhaps worryingly I found myself agreeing with many of Nott's rants but I also found it a bit shallow and vacuous. It's a bit like a McDonald's burger, it satisfies you for a short period of time but you are soon left wanting something more substantial. ( )
  PilgrimJess | Jan 15, 2023 |
I don't know what it is about Banks' novels, but I can't seem to put themown even though they're not actually about anything! Good writing I guess.

In this case we get to trail around London after Kenneth Nott (a not-so-notorious radio DJ) as he gets into trouble around town. Dear Kenneth is quite the womanizer, so our main source of entertainment is his relationship (clandestine at first, but legitimized by the end) with Celia, the wife of a definitely-notorious gangster. Using this mode to carry us through the novel is clever, if a bit cliché, and provides some great moments (such as the hilarious two word chapter 10), while slipping us quite a bit of social commentary on the sly. Religion, politics, Holocaust denial, and familial relationships are all covered under this guise, so no matter what we're :looking for" in the novel we can find it. ( )
  JaimieRiella | Feb 25, 2021 |
An entertaining novel if you like this sort of thing. I enjoyed the first half of the novel on day one of my reading, but became less enthusiastic on the second day, when the story line became less probable as it wound up and then down to the expected climax. This is not one of Banks science fiction novels but on the whole I still think his target audience was young heterosexual males. I am no longer quite so young. By 2002 Banks had over 18 novels published, about half of which were science fiction, his other novels had fallen into a bit of a rut with his protagonists being thirty something males making their way in a thriving Britain, whilst skating on the edges of the criminal underworld. Fast cars, fast women drugs and alcohol combine to give these novels their edge.

Ken Knott is a radio shock jock probably based on someone like Howard Stern, but Ken Knott is based in London (Scottish ancestry of course as this is Iain Banks) and he is fiercely left wing in his views and rants, which is probably a bit of a novelty. He typically invites controversy and lives on a narrow margin of stepping over an invisible line that could lead to him being fired. Of course he is lead by his prick in relations with women, boasting that relationships never last longer than a year, all well and good until he has an affair with a gangsters wife. Well you can probably guess the rest and you would not be far wrong

In this novel Banks chooses to interrupt the flow of the novel with his protagonist entering into anti establishment rants with anyone who will listen and sometimes with characters who do not want to listen. This gives the novel a lively platform for debate, especially in the first half and also sets the scene for the story to develop in the second part. The reader is in no doubt of Ken Knott's views and knows that it is going to lead him into trouble, but at the end of the day Knott is just as brash as the people with whom he opposes and it is easy to view him as his own worst enemy. I enjoyed Banks depiction of the life of an abrasive disc-jockey even if it skimmed the surface a little, but there are too many other characters that are recognisable stereo-types, however one recognises that this is a fast paced thriller that is written better than most and contains at least one excellent wise-crack:

I’m like the Egyptian fresh-water carp: I’m in denial

An entertaining three stars ( )
1 stem baswood | Feb 1, 2021 |
Pretty good read if a bit coarse. Takes one through the inner workings of talk radio and London's dark underbelly, immediately after 9/11. ( )
  charlie68 | Nov 16, 2020 |
Just when you thought Iain Banks' non-science fiction novels were getting into something of a rut - not entirely true, but easy to get that impression if you don't read them in order of publication - he came up, in 2003, with this story about an expat Scot in London in 2001 who is a highly opinionated shock jock (literally!) on a London commercial radio station. His days are full of witty - if obscene - repartee, political rants of a Leftist nature, hedonism and glancing contact with the world of celebrity. Even the attacks on the Twin Towers barely shake his world, though they open up new avenues of controversy and argument for his daytime radio phone-in show. But at an exceedingly posh party given by the owner of the radio station, he meets the wife of a notorious London mobster and things start down a road that shows all the signs of ending really, REALLY badly.

Everything ends happily, though. Some see the happy ending as a tacked-on getout, and it's easy to see why. But like most of Banks' central characters (I nearly wrote 'heroes' there, but there's little heroic about Ken Nott, the character in question), there is a transformation, a dark night of the soul and an emergence into daylight of sorts.

The main thing I took away from the novel was how enjoyably funny I found it (which makes the dark turn as we descend into Ken Nott's existential crisis all the darker). Banks' writing always showed off his Scots humour, but this was regularly laugh-out-loud funny. Moreover, I visualised Ken Nott as Banks himself, which perhaps made the book much more immediate to me. The politics is certainly genuine Banks, as is the inventiveness (Nott's plan to deflate a Holocaust denier on live tv has an elegant simplicity amidst the hoisting of petards). And of course, I remember the times, and although I didn't move in those circles, I knew some who did and heard the tales.

Collector's lament: the UK Little, Brown hardback first edition saw a completely new cover design for Banks' novels. It's a nice cover, but it's not the striking alternating white-on-black/black-on-white design, with illustrations by Peter Brown, of Banks' mainstream works up until then. This means that my collection of Banks first editions is not in any way uniform from 2003 onwards. This irritates me in ways that only a collector will understand. ( )
3 stem RobertDay | Dec 9, 2019 |
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» Andere auteurs toevoegen (2 mogelijk)

AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Iain Banksprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Kenny, PeterVertellerSecundaire auteursommige editiesbevestigd
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Ken Nott is a devoutly contrarian, vaguely left-wing radio shock-jock living in London. After a wedding breakfast, people start dropping fruits from a balcony on to a deserted car park below. As they get carried away, dropping more, they're told a plane has just crashed into the World Trade Center.

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Gemiddelde: (3.25)
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