UrsulaKLeGuin.com — Information Index

  • “I really like your books. They are very interesting and very good. They have very good beginnings, middles and ends. That’s one of the reasons I like them so much.” — Ruth (Age 8, Santa Cruz, California)
  • PW starred review“Le Guin is famous for creating alternative worlds (as in Left Hand of Darkness), and she approaches Lavinia's world, from which Western civilization took its course, as unique and strange as any fantasy. It's a novel that deserves to be ranked with Robert Graves's I, Claudius.Starred Review of Lavinia, Publishers Weekly, 24 December 2007
  • “Lavinia is a magnificent book, an intellectual, moral and emotional achievement...” Cecelia Holland reviews Lavinia for Locus [complete review]
  • More Lavinia reviews e Guin, reviewed by Lisa Goldstein for Strange Horizons: “The series is also concerned with power — or rather, the giving up of power. It's an unusual theme in a genre that sometimes seems to be only about military or magical power: getting it, fighting to hold onto it....” [continued]
  • “With compelling themes about the soul-crushing effects of slavery, and a journey plotline that showcases Le Guin's gift for creating a convincing array of cultures, this follow-up to Gifts (2004) and Voices (2006) may be the series' best installment.” — Jennifer Mattson, Booklist Online, 1 October 2007 [complete review]
  • Sarah Ellis reviews Powers for The Globe and Mail: “So, let's play. What if there were a writer who exhibited all the inventiveness of genre fantasy but played out the action with a cast of nuanced, gritty, convincing characters in a prose style that was as lean, distilled and rhythmical as poetry? What if there were a writer who could invite all those readers who duck at the mention of dragons into a fantasy world that was as compelling and familiar as any in realistic fiction? Speculate no more. That writer is Ursula K. Le Guin.”" 8 September 2007. [complete review]
  • Tehanu: A Return to the Source, by Sharada Bhanu. From her doctoral thesis.
  • "A simple, beautiful rendition of the Tao Te Ching."

    Hermester Barrington [complete review]

  • Two Trilogies and a Mystery: Speculations on the Earthsea Stories, by Margaret Mahy, Magpies, July 2002
  • The Cusp of Change: A Review by Maureen Scott Harris of Tales from Earthsea and The Other Wind, from The National Post, September 15, 2001
  • Which Wizard Beats ’Em All?, by James Gorman [Off-site link to The New York Times, January 11, 2002 — registration is free]
  • Ursula K. Le Guin — Mutinous Navigator, by Vonda N. McIntyre
  • The Queen of Quinkdom, by Margaret Atwood, a review of The Birthday of the World and Other Stories. [offsite link to New York Review of Books]
  • Review by Gerald Jonas of Kalpa Imperial, New York Times Sunday Book Review.
  • Stories Among the Ruins: Angélica Gorodischer’s Kalpa Imperial — review by John Garrison at Strange Horizons
  • Review of Changing Planes by John Clute at Infinite Matrix
  • Dream Sharing, by Joseph McElroy, The Village Voice
  • The King Is Pregnant —: A new review, by Sarah LeFanu of The Left Hand of Darkness
  • Gwyneth Jones’ Top 10 SF by women writers, The Guardian
  • A Kind of Magic, review of The Other Wind, by Nicholas Lezard at The Guardian
  • Classic of the month: A Wizard of Earthsea, by Amanda Craig
  • Tom Mouse
  • The Birthday of the World
  • The Telling
  • The Other Wind
  • Gifts
  • Changing Planes
  1. A Few Words to a Young Writer
  2. A Rejection Letter
  3. Manuscript Preparation
  4. A Sketchy Introduction to Copyright and Contracts
  5. A Discussion of Story, from Steering the Craft
  6. What Makes a Story
  7. A Message about Messages [offsite link]
  8. Plausibility in Fantasy
  9. Plausibility Revisited:
    Wha Hoppen and What Didn’t
  10. Some Genres I Write in:
    A Table of Contents for the Collection Unlocking the Air, with Useful Classification of the Stories by Genre
  11. Being an Editor, by Guest Columnist Michael Kandel


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