Ursula K. Le Guin: Difference between revisions

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*''[[The Tombs of Atuan]]'' ([[1971]], Atheneum) [[Earthsea]], book 2
*''[[The Tombs of Atuan]]'' ([[1971]], Atheneum) [[Earthsea]], book 2
*''[[Very Far Away from Anywhere Else]]'' ([[1976]], Atheneum; UK title: A Very Long Way from Anywhere Else)
*''[[Very Far Away from Anywhere Else]]'' ([[1976]], Atheneum; UK title: A Very Long Way from Anywhere Else)
*''[[Voices (novel)|Voices]]'' (forthcoming, [[2006]], Harcourt) [[Western Shore]], book 2
*''[[Voices (novel)|Voices]]'' ([[2006]], Harcourt) [[Western Shore]], book 2
*''[[A Wizard of Earthsea]]'' ([[1968]], Parnassus Press) [[Earthsea]], book 1
*''[[A Wizard of Earthsea]]'' ([[1968]], Parnassus Press) [[Earthsea]], book 1
*''[[The Word for World Is Forest]]'' ([[1976]], Berkley) [[Ekumen]]
*''[[The Word for World Is Forest]]'' ([[1976]], Berkley) [[Ekumen]]

Revision as of 08:39, 28 February 2007

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

She has won numerous awards, including four Hugo Awards and three Nebula Awards.

Bibliography

Novels

Short Story Collections

Children's Books

Poetry Collections

Non-Fiction

Translations

Collaborations

Edited Anthologies

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.

External Links

Categories