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The Wild Girls

Page 7

by Ursula K. Le Guin


  Why not did you miss it? Why did you miss it not? Sir, I know not.

  I provided a specious explanation of why everybody is more or less human: because everywhere local was settled by the Hainish. But that leaves out the indissoluble network of genetic relationship of all life on a planet. Such is the sleight of hand SF often has to play in order to get a story going. All we ask is the willing suspension of disbelief, which can and should return in full force when the novel is over.

  You have generously mentored and promoted many emerging writers. Did anyone do the same for you?

  I know everybody else remembers the early days of SFWA [Science Fiction Writers of America] as huge ego-competitions between X and Y and Z; but (maybe it was my practice at being a younger sister, or something?) I remember my early days in the SF world as being full of encouraging editors and fellow writers. Hey, what a neat bunch of people!

  Seems to me it’s easier to get published these days but harder to get noticed. How do you think you would fare starting out today?

  If I hadn’t connected with [literary agent] Virginia Kidd when I did, I might very well have had a much more constricted career and less visibility as a writer. Virginia was ready and able to sell anything I wrote—any length, any genre, to any editor.

  I don’t think it’s easy to get published these days, though. Not published so as it matters. Put stuff up on the Net, sure. Then what?

  Have you ever been attacked by lions?

  Three separate dogs have bitten me, many separate cats have bitten me, and recently my ankles underwent a terrifying siege by a bantam rooster at whom I had to kick dirt until he backed off and stood there all puffed up and shouting bad language like a Republican on Fox TV.

  Who needs lions?

  Many authors (including myself) have imitated your shape-shifting dream-altered world in The Lathe of Heaven. Was this idea original to you or did you swipe it from someone else?

  A lot of stuff in Lathe is (obviously) influenced by and homage to Phil Dick. But the idea of dreams that alter reality seems to me a worldwide commonplace of magical thinking. Am I wrong? Did I make it up? Doctor, am I all right?

  What’s an ansible? Is it like a Kindle? Where can I get one?

  Anarres.

  You didn’t seem too enthusiastic about the TV series based on your Earthsea novels. Why not?

  It wasn’t a series, and it wasn’t Earthsea, and can I go have a drink now?

  You once described the downtime between novels as like waiting patiently at the edge of the woods for a deer to walk by. Are you a bow hunter?

  Of the mind.

  “Travel is bad for fiction but good for poetry.” Huh?

  Just reporting my own experience as a writer.

  I share your modest enthusiasm for Austen’s Mansfield Park. I didn’t like the movie, though. Do you like any of the recent Jane movies?

  Oh, as movies, sure. Not as Austen. There is no way I can dislike Alan whatshisname with the voice like a cello.

  What’s your house like? Does your writing room have a view?

  Nice, comfortable.

  My study looks straight out at a volcano which blew off its top two thousand feet thirty years ago. I got to watch.

  Perhaps your most famous and influential novel is The Left Hand of Darkness. What’s it about?

  People tell me what my books are about.

  One problem writers have with utopias is that nothing bad can happen. You don’t seem to have this problem. Is this a function of literary technique or philosophy?

  Both. Places where nothing bad happens and nobody behaves badly are improbable, and unpromising for narrative.

  You mentioned as your favorite repeated readings Dickens, Tolstoy, Austen, etc. Are there any Americans you go back to? Any SF or fantasy?

  Let me off this question. I read too much.

  What kind of car do you drive? (I ask this of everyone.)

  Ha ha. I don’t.

  Charles is currently driving a Honda CR-V with about 120,000 on it. My favorite car we ever had was a red 1968 VW bus.

  We all know better than to rate our contemporaries. But I would love to know your take on the late Walter M. Miller Jr., since he seemed to share your deep and radically humane conservatism.

  He was a very, very good writer who I feel lucky to have read early on, so I could learn about the scope of SF from him.

  The Ekumen and Earthsea series almost seem like bookends, one SF and one Fantasy. Where would you put Lavinia on the shelf between?

  My writing is all over the map; bookends won’t work. Even shelves won’t work. Lavinia is what it is.

  Lavinia shows a great love for Rome, or at least pre-Roman virtues. That seems contrarian for a staunch progressive. Or is it?

  I am not a progressive. I think the idea of progress an invidious and generally harmful mistake. I am interested in change, which is an entirely different matter.

  I like stiff, stuffy, earnest, serious, conscientious, responsible people, like Mr. Darcy and the Romans.

  How’s your Latin?

  Mediocris.

  Dragons are good in Earthsea. Or are they?

  No. Nor bad. Other. Wild.

  What have you got against Google?

  Just its mistaken idea that it can ignore copyright and still do no harm.

  In Always Coming Home the future looks a lot like the past. What are the Kesh trying to tell us?

  What past does that future look like? I don’t know anybody like the Kesh anywhere anywhen.

  The countryside, of course, is the Napa Valley before (or after) agribusiness ruined it, but gee, we have to take our paradises where we find them.

  The Dispossessed is about an anarchist utopia, at least in part. So is Always Coming Home. Would you describe yourself as an anarchist (politically)?

  Politically, no; I vote, I’m a Democrat. But I find pacificist anarchist thought fascinating, stimulating, endlessly fruitful.

  In your acknowledgements to Lavinia, you praise your editor Mike Kandel. Is this the same Kandel who writes hilariously weird SF?

  He has translated Stanislaw Lem and others, marvelously. If he’s written SF himself he’s successfully hidden it from me. I wouldn’t put it past him. Michael? What have I been missing?

  I’m working on the cover copy for this book right now. Is it OK if I call your piece on modesty “the single greatest thing ever written on the subject”?

  I think “the single finest, most perceptive, most gut-wrenchingly incandescent fucking piece of prose ever not written by somebody called Jonathan something” might be more precise.

  Ezra Pound described poetry as “news that stays news.” How do you see it? What poets do you read most often these days?

  Lately I’ve been getting news again from old Robinson Jeffers. It isn’t cheery but it’s reliable.

  In The Lathe of Heaven, the first SF novel to take on (or even mention) global warming, the only big cities in Oregon are John Day and French Glen. Where the hell is French Glen?

  Did I spell it that way? It’s one word: Frenchglen. It’s in Harney County, in farthest southeast Oregon; pop. about twenty-five.

  Do you ever get bad reviews? Was one ever helpful?

  Yes. No.

  This is my Jeopardy item. The category is Mainstream Fiction. The answer is “One would hope.” You provide the question.

  Erm?

  One more, please. The category is Sitting Presidents. The answer is “One would hope not.”

  I’m really pretty good at Ghosts and Hangman.

  What’s your favorite gadget?

  My MacBook Pro.

  What’s your writing discipline? Has it changed as you’ve gotten older? More successful?

  I never had any discipline, I just really wanted to write when I wanted to write. So I can’t say that it has gotten any more successful.

  What’s your favorite city and don’t say Portland because it isn’t really a city at all.

  All right then,
snob. Frenchglen.

  My favorite writer (next to you, of course), R. A. Lafferty, once said that no writer has anything to say before age forty. He also once said that no writer has anything to say after forty. Do you agree?

  I would never disagree with R. A. Lafferty.

  In your pictures you seem to be laughing a lot. What’s so funny?

  Cf. A. E. Housman: “Mithridates, he died old.”

  Will you sign my baseball? It’s for my daughter.

  If you will sign my fencing foil.

  BIBLIOGRAPHY

  Major works only, principal U.S. editions only

  NOVELS

  Novels of the Ekumen:

  The Telling. Harcourt, 2000; Gollancz, 2001.

  The Word for World Is Forest. Putnam, 1976; Berkley, 1976.

  The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia. Harper & Row, 1974; Avon, 1975.

  The Left Hand of Darkness. Walker, 1969; Ace, 1969; Harper & Row, 1980.

  City of Illusions. Ace, 1967; Harper & Row, 1978.

  Planet of Exile. Ace, 1966; Harper & Row, 1978.

  Rocannon’s World. Ace, 1966; Harper & Row, 1977.

  (These three reissued in one volume as Worlds of Exile and Illusion, Tor, 1998.)

  The Books of Earthsea:

  The Other Wind. Harcourt, 2001.

  Tales from Earthsea. Harcourt, 2001.

  Tehanu. Atheneum,1990; Bantam, 1991.

  The Farthest Shore. Atheneum, 1972; Bantam, 1975.

  The Tombs of Atuan. Atheneum, 1970; Bantam, 1975.

  A Wizard of Earthsea. Parnassus/Houghton Mifflin, 1968; Ace, 1970; Atheneum, 1991.

  The Annals of the Western Shore:

  Gifts. Harcourt, 2004.

  Voices. Harcourt, 2006.

  Powers. Harcourt, 2007.

  Other Novels:

  Lavinia. Harcourt, 2008.

  Always Coming Home. Harper & Row, 1985; Bantam, 1987; U.C. Press, 2000.

  The Eye of the Heron. Harper & Row, 1983; Bantam, 1983.

  The Beginning Place. Harper & Row, 1980; Bantam,1981.

  Malafrena. Putnam, 1979; Berkely, 1980.

  Very Far Away from Anywhere Else. Atheneum, 1976; Bantam, 1978.

  The Lathe of Heaven. Scribners, 1971; Avon, 1972; Scribners, 2008.

  STORY COLLECTIONS

  Changing Planes. Harcourt, 2003; Mythopoeic Society Award nomination, 2004.

  The Birthday of the World. HarperCollins, 2002.

  Unlocking the Air. Harper Collins, 1996.

  Four Ways to Forgiveness. Harper Prism, 1995; pb, 1996.

  A Fisherman of the Inland Sea. Harper Prism,1994; pb, 1995.

  Searoad. HarperCollins, 1991; pb, 1992.

  Buffalo Gals. Capra,1987; NAL 1988.

  The Compass Rose. Underwood-Miller, 1982; Harper & Row, 1982; Bantam, 1983.

  Orsinian Tales. Harper & Row, 1976; Bantam, 1977.

  The Wind’s Twelve Quarters. Harper & Row, 1975; Bantam, 1976.

  POETRY

  Incredible Good Fortune. Shambhala, 2006.

  Sixty Odd. Shambhala, 1999.

  Going out with Peacocks. HarperCollins, 1994.

  Blue Moon over Thurman Street (with Roger Dorband). NewSage, 1993.

  Wild Oats and Fireweed. Harper & Row, 1988.

  Hard Words. Harper & Row, 1981.

  Wild Angels. Capra, 1974.

  TRANSLATIONS

  Selected Poems of Gabriela Mistral. University of New Mexico Press, 2003.

  Kalpa Imperial. (Angelica Gorodischer). Small Beer Press, 2003.

  The Twins, The Dream/Las Gemelas, El Sueno (with Diana Bellessi). Arte Publico Press, 1997; Ed. Norma, 1998.

  Lao Tzu: Tao Te Ching: Book About The Way and the Power of the Way. Shambhala, 1997, 2009. New edition includes two CDs. Music by Todd Barton.

  CRITICISM

  Cheek by Jowl. Aqueduct, 2009.

  The Wave in the Mind. Shambhala, 2004.

  Steering the Craft. Eighth Mountain, 1998.

  The Language of the Night (revised ed.). HarperCollins, 1992.

  Dancing at the Edge of the World. Grove, 1989.

  BOOKS FOR CHILDREN

  The Catwings Books (illus. S. D. Schindler), 1988–1999:

  Catwings. Orchard.

  Catwings Return. Orchard.

  Wonderful Alexander and the Catwings. Orchard.

  Jane on Her Own. Orchard.

  Other Books for Children:

  Cat Dreams (illus. S. D. Schindler). Scholastic, 2010.

  Tom Mouse (illus. J. Downing). Roaring Brook, 2002.

  A Ride on the Red Mare’s Back (illus. J. Downing). Orchard, 1992. pb, 1993.

  Fish Soup (illus. P. Wynne). Atheneum, 1992.

  Fire and Stone (illus. L. Marshall). Atheneum, 1989.

  A Visit from Dr. Katz (illus. A. Barrow). Atheneum, 1988.

  Solomon Leviathan (illus. A. Austin). Philomel, 1988.

  Cobbler’s Rune (illus. A. Austin). Cheap Street, 1983.

  Leese Webster (illus. James Brunsman). Atheneum, 1979.

  ANTHOLOGIES EDITED

  The Norton Book of Science Fiction (with Brian Attebery and Karen Fowler). Norton, 1993.

  Edges. With Virginia Kidd. Pocket Books, 1980.

  Interfaces. With Virginia Kidd. Grosset & Dunlap/Ace, 1980.

  Nebula Award Stories XI. Harper & Row, 1977.

  SCREENPLAY IN BOOK FORMAT

  King Dog. Capra, 1985.

  CHAPBOOKS

  The Art of Bunditsu. Ygor & Buntho Make Books Press, 1993.

  Findings. Ox Head, 1992.

  No Boats. Ygor & Buntho Make Books Press, 1992.

  A Winter Solstice Ritual for the Pacific Northwest (with Vonda N. McIntyre). Ygor & Buntho Make Books Press, 1991.

  In the Red Zone (with Henk Pander). Lord John, 1983.

  Tillai and Tylissos (with Theodora Kroeber). Red Bull, 1979.

  Walking in Cornwall. n.p. 1976. Reprinted, Crescent Moon, 2008.

  The Water Is Wide. Pendragon Press, 1976.

  ABOUT THE AUTHOR

  URSULA K. LE GUIN WAS BORN A Kroeber in Berkeley, California. Her mother was a psychologist and writer; her father was the chair of University of California–Berkeley’s Anthropology Department. “My father studied real cultures and I make them up,” she once said. “In a way, the same thing.”

  After attending Radcliffe and Columbia (MA, French Literature) she studied in Paris on a Fulbright scholarship, where she met and married historian Charles Le Guin.

  They returned to the United States on the Queen Mary. After a few years of teaching, she began to write fiction.

  Since her first published stories in the 1960s, Le Guin has been a major force in science fiction and fantasy. The Left Hand of Darkness, exploring a culture without gender, placed her at the center of the political/feminist/literary movement elevating SF to a new maturity. Her Earthsea fantasies and her somber SF novels of the interstellar Ekumen have influenced, illuminated, and entertained readers worldwide for almost fifty years. She has also written poetry and essays on social and literary themes.

  Among the many honors her work has received are a National Book Award, five Hugo Awards, five Nebula Awards, SFWA’s Grand Master, the Kafka Award, a Pushcart Prize, the Howard Vursell Award of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the PEN/Malamud Award.

  Critic Harold Bloom includes her on his list of classic American authors. Novelist Margaret Atwood is more specific and less reserved: “Within the frequently messy sandbox of sci-fi fantasy, some of the most accomplished and suggestive intellectual play of the last century has taken place. Which brings us to Ursula K. Le Guin . . .”

  She lives in Portland, Oregon.

  PM PRESS OUTSPOKEN AUTHORS

  The Left Left Behind

  Terry Bisson

  978-1-60486-086-3

  $12

  Hugo and Nebula award-winner Terry Bisson is best known for his short stories, which range from the southern sweetness of “Bears Discover Fire” to the alienated aliens of “They�
��re Made out of Meat.” He is also a 1960s New Left vet with a history of activism and an intact (if battered) radical ideology.

  The Left Behind novels (about the so-called “Rapture” in which all the born-agains ascend straight to heaven) are among the bestselling Christian books in the U.S., describing in lurid detail the adventures of those “left behind” to battle the Anti-Christ. Put Bisson and the Born-Agains together, and what do you get? The Left Left Behind—a sardonic, merciless, tasteless, take-no-prisoners satire of the entire apocalyptic enterprise that spares no one-predatory preachers, goth lingerie, Pacifica radio, Indian casinos, gangsta rap, and even “art cars” at Burning Man.

  Plus: “Special Relativity,” a one-act drama that answers the question: When Albert Einstein, Paul Robeson, J. Edgar Hoover are raised from the dead at an anti-Bush rally, which one wears the dress? As with all Outspoken Author books, there is a deep interview and autobiography: at length, in-depth, no-holds-barred, and all-bets-off: an extended tour though the mind and work, the history and politics of our Outspoken Author. Surprises are promised.

  PM PRESS OUTSPOKEN AUTHORS

  The Lucky Strike

  Kim Stanley Robinson

  978-1-60486-085-6

  $12

  Combining dazzling speculation with a profoundly humanist vision, Kim Stanley Robinson is known as not only the most literary but also the most progressive (read “radical”) of today’s top-rank SF authors. His bestselling Mars Trilogy tells the epic story of the future colonization of the red planet, and the revolution that inevitably follows. His latest novel, Galileo’s Dream, is a stunning combination of historical drama and far-flung space opera, in which the ten dimensions of the universe itself are rewoven to ensnare history’s most notorious torturers.

 

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