Several days ago, Iain Banks died. Although he made his mark on literature with a variety of social realist and transgressive novels, he garnered something of a cult following with his foray into science-fiction that amounted to twelve books and a critical rebooting (along with novelists such as Alastair Reynolds) of the "space opera" genre. More importantly, and the reason why I'm bothering to note his death on this blog, Banks was known for being a socialist author and his science-fiction, more than his supposed "literary" fiction, was stamped with his politics. Iain Banks drinking, like so many socialist authors Having grown up reading science-fiction and fantasy, when I encountered Banks I was already a marxist. There was always a part of me who felt that progressive politics and speculative fiction went hand-in-hand––I grew up reading the kind of science fiction and fantasy, after all, that was largely opposed to the tradition of Tolkien and Star
Marxist-Leninist-Maoist reflections