The world
has been diminished with the death of Ursula Le Guin and yet we
have her words which will never be lost as long as her books continue to be
read. Those
familiar with her work are blessed to have been enriched by her books and with
that blessing comes the responsibility of making sure the next generation of
readers are no strangers to her writing.
Le Guin
raised fantasy into high literature. Her stories take readers into what she
calls, the “inner lands” of the imagination. She believed such writing could be
a moral force.
People
often confuse fantasy and fairy tales. One notable difference—in fairy tales,
usually a creature of supernatural powers such as a genie, brings about the
resolution the story presents. In contrast, in fantasy, it is a human being that brings about the
resolution—hence, fantasy literature by nature empowers.
True fantasy tracks a journey. The hero/heroine leaves home and ventures into the world to resolve an imbalance in the world. To complete the journey, the hero/heroine must return home, profoundly altered by their journey to reestablish balance in the world. Le Guin wrote—“True journey is return” and in pure Le Guin fashion, her definition of home was distinctly her own “Home isn’t where they have to let you in. It’s not a place at all. Home is imaginary. Home, imagined, comes to be.”
True fantasy tracks a journey. The hero/heroine leaves home and ventures into the world to resolve an imbalance in the world. To complete the journey, the hero/heroine must return home, profoundly altered by their journey to reestablish balance in the world. Le Guin wrote—“True journey is return” and in pure Le Guin fashion, her definition of home was distinctly her own “Home isn’t where they have to let you in. It’s not a place at all. Home is imaginary. Home, imagined, comes to be.”
Le Guin’s
books of fantasy differ from other fantasy stories is how her stories revolve
around the idea of restoring balance, which is different than a simpler
struggle between good and evil.
Le Guin
believed the writer’s pleasant duty is to ply the reader’s imagination with the
“best and purest nourishment that it can absorb.” Now is the time to
revisit her books, meet those you have not yet read and pass on to those who
don’t yet know of her work, a very rich and rewarding nourishment.
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