The Wasp Factory is Iain’s bank expertly written masterwork about a boy isolated from the rest of the world. Unlike American Psycho, where we see mental isolation, this book is about physical isolation and how it has affected the boy, his brother, and his dad. I’ve read Iain Bank’s other writings, first being The Crow Road but this book is the one that has always weirded me out by it’s cover.
I mean I am only fifteen and have read American Psycho, The Fight Club, Trainspotting, etc, but this book is the one that has made the most impact on me. I don’t have words for why this book has impacted me so much. I mean I am quite desensitised to gore and all but here the protagonist is a teenager. And that, has made all the difference. I can’t relate to a psychopathic nepotistic boy who looks perfect, neither do I care about a man who dislikes capitalism. Those were good books, but this one, where a boy is not desensitized but rather so isolated that he has lost his morals. That has a lot of impact on my young psyche.
This boy is a symbol for people who are suffering from life’s meaninglessness, but his actions are symbol of a mind who is in so much agony that he cannot do anything but pass on that agony to others. This book is well written but it’s subject matter is anything but for well minds. This book has a convincing premise and background characters that are worse than our protagonist. This convincing premise mixed with the character choice causes a paranoia to build up inside the reader that is never fully extinguished as whatever acts the protagonist does, they both resolve the previous paranoia and build up more. The reason that this book affected me was because maybe, someday, I might meet a person like this guy, rage fuelled maniacs who despite not being possessed by a demon, is nothing less than one.
All in all, this book is terrifying but addicting. I have read this book a lot and if you haven’t read it, I ask you to read this book.
Because I don’t want to suffer alone…
rdtthoughtpolice t1_j9xonui wrote
Interesting take!
I've read a lot of his books but not this one. I think Use of Weapons had the most effect on me because the subject matter is also pretty extreme. He was a brilliant writer, one of my favourites, but he certainly got into some dark places in his writing, especially when it came to the human mind.
Have you read much else of his work?