Ursula K. Le Guin: Difference between revisions

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** ''[[The Farthest Shore]]'' ([[1972]], Atheneum), book 3
** ''[[The Farthest Shore]]'' ([[1972]], Atheneum), book 3
** ''[[Tehanu|Tehanu: The Last Book of Earthsea]]'' ([[1990]], Atheneum), book 4, winner 1991 Nebula Award, 1991 Locus Award, best fantasy novel
** ''[[Tehanu|Tehanu: The Last Book of Earthsea]]'' ([[1990]], Atheneum), book 4, winner 1991 Nebula Award, 1991 Locus Award, best fantasy novel
** ''[[Tales from Earthsea]]'' ([[2001]], Harcourt) [[Earthsea]], short story collection, book 5
** ''[[Tales from Earthsea]]'' ([[2001]], Harcourt) [[Earthsea]], short story collection, book 5, winner 2002 Locus Award, best collection
** ''[[The Other Wind]]'' ([[2001]], Harcourt), book 5
** ''[[The Other Wind]]'' ([[2001]], Harcourt), book 5, winner 2002 World Fantasy Award


* [[Ekumen]] loosely related novels and stories set in one future history
* [[Ekumen]] loosely related novels and stories set in one future history
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** ''[[The Word for World Is Forest]]'' ([[1976]], Berkley), (originally published in ''Again, Dangerous Visions,'') edited by [[Harlan Ellison]], winner, 1973 Hugo Award  
** ''[[The Word for World Is Forest]]'' ([[1976]], Berkley), (originally published in ''Again, Dangerous Visions,'') edited by [[Harlan Ellison]], winner, 1973 Hugo Award  
*''[[A Fisherman of the Inland Sea]]'' ([[1994]], HarperPrism), short story collection
*''[[A Fisherman of the Inland Sea]]'' ([[1994]], HarperPrism), short story collection
*''[[Four Ways to Forgiveness]]'' ([[1995]], HarperPrism), short story collection
*''[[Four Ways to Forgiveness]]'' ([[1995]], HarperPrism), short story collection, winner 1996 Locus Award, best collection
** ''[[The Telling]]'' ([[2000]], Harcourt)
** ''[[The Telling]]'' ([[2000]], Harcourt), winner 2001 Locus Award
** ''[[The Birthday of the World and Other Stories]]'' ([[2002]], HarperCollins)
** ''[[The Birthday of the World and Other Stories]]'' ([[2002]], HarperCollins)


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*''[[The Language of the Night|The Language of the Night: Essays on Fantasy and Science Fiction]]'' ([[1979]], ed. [[Susan Wood]], G.P. Putnam; 1989, Women's Press; 2nd edition published in [[1992]] by HarperCollins)
*''[[The Language of the Night|The Language of the Night: Essays on Fantasy and Science Fiction]]'' ([[1979]], ed. [[Susan Wood]], G.P. Putnam; 1989, Women's Press; 2nd edition published in [[1992]] by HarperCollins)
*''[[Steering the Craft|Steering the Craft: Exercises and Discussions on Story Writing for the Lone Navigator or the Mutinous Crew]]'' ([[1998]], Eight Mountain)
*''[[Steering the Craft|Steering the Craft: Exercises and Discussions on Story Writing for the Lone Navigator or the Mutinous Crew]]'' ([[1998]], Eight Mountain)
*''[[The Wave in the Mind|The Wave in the Mind: Talks and Essays on the Writer, the Reader, and the Imagination]]'' ([[2004]], Shambhala)
*''[[The Wave in the Mind|The Wave in the Mind: Talks and Essays on the Writer, the Reader, and the Imagination]]'' ([[2004]], Shambhala), winner 2005 Locus Award, best nonfiction


=== Translations ===
=== Translations ===
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* "Forgiveness Day" ([[1994]]) [Ekumen]], winner 1995 Locus Award, 1995 Asimov's Magazine Reader Poll,
* "Forgiveness Day" ([[1994]]) [Ekumen]], winner 1995 Locus Award, 1995 Asimov's Magazine Reader Poll,
* "The Matter of Seggri" ([[1994]]), [[Ekumen]], winner 1995 Tiptree Award
* "The Matter of Seggri" ([[1994]]), [[Ekumen]], winner 1995 Tiptree Award
 
* "Solitude" ([[1994]]), winner 1996 Nebula Award
 
* "Mountain Ways" ([[1996]]), winner 1997 Tiptree Award, 1997 Locus Award
* "The Birthday of the World" ([[2000]]), winner 2001 Locus Award, best novelette
* "The Bones of the Earth" ([[2001]]), winner 2002 Locus Award, best short story
* "The Finder" ([[2001]]), winner 2002 Locus Award, best novella
* "The Wild Girls" ([[2002]]), winner 2003 Locus Award, best novelette


=== Uncollected stories and essays ===
=== Uncollected stories and essays ===

Revision as of 11:54, 8 May 2008

Ursula Kroeber Le Guin (ursulakleguin.com) (born October 21, 1929 in Berkeley, California) is an American author of science fiction, fantasy, realistic fiction and poetry.

She has won the World Fantasy Award life achievement award, the Science Fiction Writers of American Grand Master Award, and the Science Fiction Research Association Pilgrim Award. She is a living inductee of the Science Fiction Hall of Fame. The Earthsea series was listed as #4 in the 1998 Locus Magazine all-time fantasy before 1990 poll, and A Wizard of Earthsea was listed as #3 in the 1987 Locus Magazine all-time best fantasy novel poll.

Bibliography

Important sequences and series:

Novels not in series

Short story collections not in series

See also List of short stories by Ursula K. Le Guin

Children's books not in series

Poetry collections

Non-fiction

Translations

Collaborations

Edited anthologies

Award-winning short fiction

  • "The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas" (1973), winner 1974 Hugo Award, best short story
  • "The Day Before the Revolution" (1975), Ekumen story, prequel to The Dispossessed," winner, 1975 Nebula Award, 1975 Locus Award
  • "The New Atlantis" (1975), winner 1976 Locus Award
  • "Sur" (1982), winner 1983 Locus Award
  • "Buffalo Gals, Won't You Come Out Tonight?" (1987), winner 1988 Hugo Award, best novelette; 1988 World Fantasy Award, best novella
  • "Forgiveness Day" (1994) [Ekumen]], winner 1995 Locus Award, 1995 Asimov's Magazine Reader Poll,
  • "The Matter of Seggri" (1994), Ekumen, winner 1995 Tiptree Award
  • "Solitude" (1994), winner 1996 Nebula Award
  • "Mountain Ways" (1996), winner 1997 Tiptree Award, 1997 Locus Award
  • "The Birthday of the World" (2000), winner 2001 Locus Award, best novelette
  • "The Bones of the Earth" (2001), winner 2002 Locus Award, best short story
  • "The Finder" (2001), winner 2002 Locus Award, best novella
  • "The Wild Girls" (2002), winner 2003 Locus Award, best novelette

Uncollected stories and essays

  • "Along the River" (1993, Omni Best Science Fiction Three)
  • "Earthsea Revisioned" (1993, Green Bay booklet)
  • "The Lost Children" (1996, Thirteenth Moon)
  • "The Ursula Major Construct: or, A Far Greater Horror Loomed" (1973, Clarion III)
  • "The Wild Girls" (2002, Asimov's)

Adaptations of works

Intertextual references

Le Guin's ansible technology (from the Ekumen universe) has been referenced in Orson Scott Card's Ender's Game.

Further reading and listening