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I went hunting for Earthsea fanfiction at the start of the year, after I reread the series (before reading the new ones). Found some today by
daegaer here.
It's interesting that Tehanu is often seen as an attempt to re-engineer the earlier books, but I have a sneaking admiration for Le Guin in having the courage to revisit a set of books that made her name - and say where she got it wrong.
I also love the beauty that she finds in very small, intimate moments. There's a sentence in Tehanu that I just adore: "They made and ate their supper and cleared it away."
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It's interesting that Tehanu is often seen as an attempt to re-engineer the earlier books, but I have a sneaking admiration for Le Guin in having the courage to revisit a set of books that made her name - and say where she got it wrong.
I also love the beauty that she finds in very small, intimate moments. There's a sentence in Tehanu that I just adore: "They made and ate their supper and cleared it away."
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Date: 2003-05-02 01:49 pm (UTC)Re:
Date: 2003-05-05 04:46 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-05-02 02:50 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2003-05-02 03:10 pm (UTC)*nods in agreement* When I reread Tehanu at the start of the year, and went on my dedicated webhunt for fanfic and critique, that seemed to be the main kind of criticism I came across. I wonder if my irritation with it is part of my devotion to Tehanu!
I take your point about the bad men being too bad, and that coming at a cost for the story. I think that the son Spark is probably the most successful male character in the book (well, apart from Ged, I mean), in terms of showing how the society affects 'normal' men: he's not a bad lad, but...
Have you read the most recent books Tales From Earthsea and The Other Wind?
Thank you again for your piece - it was such a thrill to find some Earthsea fanfiction, and one that got me thinking hard again about some of my favourite books, as well as being so beautifully written.
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Date: 2003-05-02 03:29 pm (UTC)And thanks again for your comments on my fic. I'm very glad you found it worthwhile.
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Date: 2003-05-02 03:51 pm (UTC)I'll just say that if you do decide to take the plunge with them, make sure you read the short stories in order - I did my usual trick with short story collections of shifting around the book, but they are meant to be read in sequence.
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Date: 2003-05-03 05:23 am (UTC)So even though I've read and reread The Farthest Shore since childhood, I never connected the dots in it. When I reread the Earthsea books at the start of the year it suddenly connected up to a lot of other things, Pullman's books in particular, and made sense. I really can be extraordinarily dense at times.
(The Dispossessed I read and everything pinged all at once. I think that book is close to perfect.)
Have you ever read any of David Lodge's books? The parodies of academia (Small World, Changing Places)? In one of them, a group of English Lit academics play a dinner party game in which they have to admit to a Canonical Work that they have never read; one particular eminent person there admits to never having got through Hamlet. I feel a bit like that about The Left Hand of Darkness (well, and about a lot of other things too, I won't mention how little Shakespeare I've read... *g*).
small moments
Date: 2003-05-03 06:01 am (UTC)This is what I like most about Tehanu, and about Le Guin's later work in general. I don't have a copy with me, but the way of treating daily activity (such as housework) as a transcendent praxis. I have Le Guin's translation of the Tao Te Ching, and read it quite a lot. The TTC has a lot about humble participation in the stuff of consciousness. 'Mingle yourself with the dust of the world' - almost a description of housework, at least the way I do it.
I do believe it is real as well: the spritual validity of simply passing through the world, instead of straining after transcendence.
Re: small moments
Date: 2003-05-05 05:13 am (UTC)Thanks for the heads-up about her version of Tao Te Ching, I didn't know she had done one.