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Nov. 27th, 2015 05:14 pmI've been vaguely meaning to read more Ursula K. LeGuin for a while now; The Word For World Is Forest jumped to the top of my list by virtue of being available from my library as a downloadable Kindle eBook.
This is quite a depressing little book, isn't it? The plot is fairly simple:
- humans colonize a heavily wooded alien planet, including enslaving exploiting the local alien species in all the gross ways that one would expect
- to everyone's surprise, the initially-pacifist aliens eventually revolt
- the one anthropologist who has established friendly relations with the aliens is depressed
- suddenly, deus ex orders arrive from Earth dictating that everyone needs to calm the hell down and behave more ethically
- alas, gross humans continue to ruin the planned de-escalation and everything ends in bloodshed
Obviously, I find none of this implausible. It's kind of a misery to spend at least half the book trapped inside the head of the grossest human being of all -- again, I fully believe people like Davidson exist, but he's so! awful! I don't think I'll ever be rereading this one; life's too short to spend that much time in his head again.
This is quite a depressing little book, isn't it? The plot is fairly simple:
- humans colonize a heavily wooded alien planet, including enslaving exploiting the local alien species in all the gross ways that one would expect
- to everyone's surprise, the initially-pacifist aliens eventually revolt
- the one anthropologist who has established friendly relations with the aliens is depressed
- suddenly, deus ex orders arrive from Earth dictating that everyone needs to calm the hell down and behave more ethically
- alas, gross humans continue to ruin the planned de-escalation and everything ends in bloodshed
Obviously, I find none of this implausible. It's kind of a misery to spend at least half the book trapped inside the head of the grossest human being of all -- again, I fully believe people like Davidson exist, but he's so! awful! I don't think I'll ever be rereading this one; life's too short to spend that much time in his head again.
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Date: 2015-11-28 12:35 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-11-28 02:22 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-11-28 02:29 am (UTC)You know what, I think it's actually "The Day Before the Revolution," from the same collection. IDK why I'd confuse those two titles, because they aren't really close.
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Date: 2015-11-28 05:04 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-11-29 02:04 am (UTC)What Le Guin have you already read?
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Date: 2015-11-29 04:59 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-11-29 09:15 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-11-29 09:16 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-11-29 10:31 pm (UTC)Incidentally, the two short stories mentioned upthread were some of my favorites of hers, circa 13 years ago anyway.
Skygiants: I know you didn't ask for recs, but my favorite Le Guin includes the following short story collections: The Fisherman of the Inland Sea, The Winds Twelve Quarters, and The Birthday of the World. It's probably no coincidence that they're pretty heavy on Ecumenical Universe stories, which are my faves. Also, have you read the Earthsea stories after Tehanu? I loved those as well, although some complain about the retcon in The Other Wind.
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Date: 2015-11-30 01:09 am (UTC)Birthday of the World is my favorite Le Guin collection. Among other things, it has Solitude, which is my single favorite Le Guin work ever. :D
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Date: 2015-11-30 01:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2015-12-02 04:25 am (UTC)I haven't read the Earthsea stories after Tehanu -- I also haven't read any of Earthsea in so long that I've been meaning to just embark on a full read-through at some point, because I read them before at an age when I really did not have any critical thinking faculties and I'm very curious what I'd think of them now. Tombs of Atuan is the only one that made a huge impression on me at that time.
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Date: 2015-12-02 04:26 am (UTC)