Ursula K. Le Guin: Difference between revisions

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*''[[The Eye of the Heron]]'' ([[1982]], Victor Gollancz)
*''[[The Eye of the Heron]]'' ([[1982]], Victor Gollancz)
*''[[The Farthest Shore]]'' ([[1972]], Atheneum) [[Earthsea]], book 3
*''[[The Farthest Shore]]'' ([[1972]], Atheneum) [[Earthsea]], book 3
*''[[Gifts]]'' ([[2004]], Harcourt)
*''[[Gifts]]'' ([[2004]], Harcourt) [[Western Shore]], book 1
*''[[The Lathe of Heaven]]'' ([[1971]], Scribner)
*''[[The Lathe of Heaven]]'' ([[1971]], Scribner)
*''[[The Left Hand of Darkness]]'' ([[1969]], Ace) [[Ekumen]]
*''[[The Left Hand of Darkness]]'' ([[1969]], Ace) [[Ekumen]]
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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]]'' (forthcoming, [[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 05:15, 28 May 2006

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

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.

Categories