1st Floor Show me where

SCIENCE FICTION/LeGuin, Ursula K.
0 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor SCIENCE FICTION/LeGuin, Ursula K. Due Nov 22, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : Harcourt, Inc 2003.
Language
English
Main Author
Ursula K. Le Guin, 1929-2018 (-)
Edition
1st ed
Physical Description
246 p. : ill
ISBN
9780151009718
  • Contents of Changing Planes with a little description
  • Note The author acknowledges the readers' discomfort with air travel after 9
  • 11. Sita Dulip's Method How Sita Dulip, sitting between flights in an awful airport, learned to travel to other planes of existence by focusing her mind in a certain way
  • The result: a more interesting kind of tourism
  • The Porridge on Islac On Islac, people are physically very different from one another: the aftermath of an unfortunate boom and crash in genetic engineering
  • Cautionary, humorous, with a touch of poetry (bearwigs are recombinant teddy bears that developed a taste for book glue and paper)
  • The Wisdom of the Asonu The Asonu become silent as they mature: their total abstinence from language is unsettling
  • Questioning the Hennebet The Hennebet look just like us, but their minds (sort of Taoist) are totally alien
  • The traveler tries to but cannot communicate with them; a glimpse of their worldview makes her less sure about her own
  • The Angry Veksi A society torn by violence, which, however, has its human rules of conduct(It's about human violence, of course)
  • Social Dreaming of the Frin A society in which dreaming is communal, not personal
  • Fascinating examination of the idea that some loss of self is necessary for selfhood
  • The Royals of Hegn Satire of the Brits and their absurd fascination with royalty
  • In Hegn, everyone is royal and comeletely dotty about the very few Commoners (who are really low-class)
  • Tales of Blood from Mahigul Histories that are political allegories of man's inhumanity to man
  • All about war, tyranny, self-destruction (Male-dominated, of course)
  • Wake Island An experiment to make children smarter by having them require less sleep, then no sleep at all, backfires: without sleep, people become mindless animals (Another approach to the loss-of-self idea)
  • The Nna Mmoy Language A language so alien and complex, it contains an entire culture (its speakers live primitively)
  • The traveler's vain attempts to use a translating machine
  • The Building This account of two cultures and of a migration to build a mysterious building, generation after generation, touches on the question, What is art? That is, the transcendental, nonutilitarian strivings of human beings (Influence of Borges here)
  • The Gyran Hatred of Wings The blessing and the curse (more curse than blessing) of growing wings and flying
  • The Gyr put up with-try to ignore-their affliction, going about their business as lawyers, accountants, etc
  • Yet the inspiring image of flight remains
  • The Island of the Immortals A horror story, worse than "Wake Island," and probably from Gulliver's Travels: some people, bitten by a fly, cannot die
  • Buried alive, after centuries, they turn to diamonds, still alive
  • Confusion in Untilde;i A virtual reality satire taken from the pages of Stanislaw Lem: the traveler becomes lost in a VR machine and passes from one ridiculous dream to another
  • Great Joy Big business and the travel industry produce a monstrous Disneylike theme park, exploiting the natives
  • Humorous (a village full of Santa Clauses that speak with an accent), but also acerbic, being close to home
  • The Seasons of the Ansarac A society that alternates between city life and country life, each having its joys and miseries
  • Commentary on the mortality of humanity: its sorrow alleviated by a sexual dance
Review by Booklist Review

"The airport offers nothing to any human being except access to the interval between planes." In Le Guin's series of 16 vivid stories, an airport-bound woman with an inquiring mind visits assorted other planes of existence. With dispassion, wry humor, and a keen eye, and aided as well by research conducted in libraries of various kinds, she describes those excursions in hopes of inducing the reader to try interplanary travel. Each story features a different society and culture, and some of these settings allow telling commentary on the foibles of our world. Hegn, for example, is a small plane on which everyone belongs to the royal family, except for one, carefully nurtured family of commoners. In Asonu, adults rarely say even one word, though the children chatter until they hit their teens, when they start becoming more and more silent. As for Hennebet, do its people experience reincarnation, or are they living again? The narrator's expectations of identity and time become very confused trying to grasp the slippery concept upon which that plane is based. And then there is unusually tenuous Zuehe, which imparts the feeling of being in a landscape created by the artist Escher. Eric Beddows' black-and-white illustrations perfectly complement Le Guin's wildly inventive array of societies and cultures. Sure to delight fans of the unusual travelogue, this is just plain good airport reading. --Sally Estes

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

When most people get stuck for hours in an airport, nothing much comes of it but boredom. When a writer like Le Guin (The Other Wind, etc.) has such an experience, however, the result may be a book of short stories. In "Sita Dulip's Method," a bored traveler, a friend of the narrator, discovers that if she sits on her uncomfortable airport chair in just the right way and thinks just the right thoughts, she can change planes-not airplanes, mind you, but planes of existence. Each of the linked stories that follows recounts a trip by the narrator or someone of her acquaintance to a different plane. "The Silence of the Asonu," for example, describes a world where the people speak only half a dozen words in any given year, and "The Ire of the Veksi" recounts a visit to a plane where virtually all the natives are angry virtually all of the time. The majority of these stories are allegorical to some degree. Most have a satiric edge, as in "Great Joy," for example which features an entire world devoted to the commercial side of various holidays, with lots of great shopping in quaint little towns like Nol City, O Little Town and Yuleville. Many of the tales echo, or take issue with, other works of fantastic fiction. Swift's Gulliver's Travels is clearly an influence, and one story, "Wake Island," can be seen as a re-examination of the basic premise of Nancy Kress's classic superman tale, "Beggars in Spain." This is a fairly minor effort, but like everything from Le Guin's pen, a delight. B&w illus. by Eric Beddows. 3-city author tour. (July) Forecast: Published as straight literary fiction, this has many subtle references to fantasy and science fiction, and might attract more browsers if shelved with Le Guin's SF works. (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

In this collection of 16 stories (six of which have appeared in magazines or on web sites), speculative fiction master Le Guin (Tales from Earthsea) explores assumptions about our own world. Presented as travelers' tales about different planets (or "planes of existence"), the stories fit well together as a meditation on culture and what it means to be human. Many illustrate the absurdities of human nature-"Great Joy," for instance, looks at the ultimate commercialization of Christmas. Others are darker in tone; several, including "Porridge on Islac" and "Wake Island," explore our technological hubris. Le Guin's writing is deceptively simple, but she's working with deep themes, including the prevalence of violence, the tension between science and nature, and how we need to fight fear and sometimes risk ourselves in order to feel truly alive. A humorous, imaginative, and thoughtful collection; Escher-like illustrations by Eric Beddows contribute to its charm. Highly recommended for literary short story and sf collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 3/1/03.]-Devon Thomas, Hass MS&L, Ann Arbor, MI (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The inconveniences and exasperations of airplane travel (described in a bilious prefatory Author's Note) are the starting-point for a sparkling collection of 16 linked stories. This latest from Le Guin consists of delineations of different "planes" of reality visited by passengers who opt for "interplanary travel." In "The Royals of Hegn," for example, a race of blue-blooded epicureans indulges a paparazzi-like fascination with the scandalous misdeeds of oversexed "commoners." Conversely, in "Feeling at Home with the Hennebet," a traveler encounters a placid people who exist quite happily without convictions of any kind. "The Silence of the Asonu" introduces a people who "abstain" from speaking. Elsewhere, Le Guin (The Birthday of the World, 2002, etc.) doesn't refrain from sardonic political commentary, but gives it several ingenious spins. "Seasons of the Ansarac" depicts people who relive their lives in seasonal migrations, to the annoyance of their briskly efficient colonizers. In "Porridge on Islac," genetic engineering has obliterated distinctions among human, animal, and plant life; and in the chilling "Wake Island," scientific efforts to create "supersmarts" unencumbered by the need for sleep instead produces generations of amoral monsters. A peaceful society has paradoxically evolved from a lengthy history of territorialism, tyranny, and genocide (accomplished with the ultimate weapon of an uncontrollable "Black Dog") in "Woeful Tales from Mahigul." And Le Guin's mythmaking power is brilliantly displayed in a story of winged people whose mutant birthright is both curse and liberation ("The Fliers of Gy"). One wishes she had avoided some all- too-easy targets (e.g., on "Hollo-Een ! Island . . . [children are] dressed as witches, ghosts, space aliens, and Ronald Reagan"). But her stories' unconventional premises are more often than not shaped into entrancing, provocative narratives. Inventive and highly entertaining tales. Le Guin's touch is as magical as ever. Copyright ©Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

SITA DULIP'S METHODTHE RANGE OF THE AIRPLANE-a few thousand miles, the other side of the world, coconut palms, glaciers, the poles, the Poles, a lama, a llama, etc.-is pitifully limited compared to the vast extent and variety of experience provided, to those who know how to use it, by the airport.Airplanes are cramped, jammed, hectic, noisy, germy, alarming, and boring, and they serve unusually nasty food at utterly unreasonable intervals. Airports, though larger, share the crowding, vile air, noise, and relentless tension, while their food is often even nastier, consisting entirely of fried lumps of something; and the places one has to eat it in are suicidally depressing. On the airplane, everyone is locked into a seat with a belt and can move only during very short periods when they are allowed to stand in line waiting to empty their bladders until, just before they reach the toilet cubicle, a nagging loudspeaker harries them back to belted immobility. In the airport, luggage-laden people rush hither and yon through endless corridors, like souls to each of whom the devil has furnished a different, inaccurate map of the escape route from hell. These rushing people are watched by people who sit in plastic seats bolted to the floor and who might just as well be bolted to the seats. So far, then, the airport and the airplane are equal, in the way that the bottom of one septic tank is equal, all in all, to the bottom of the next septic tank.If both you and your plane are on time, the airport is merely a diffuse, short, miserable prelude to the intense, long, miserable plane trip. But what if there's five hours between your arrival and your connecting flight, or your plane is late arriving and you've missed your connection, or the connecting flight is late, or the staff of another airline are striking for a wage-benefit package and the government has not yet ordered out the National Guard to control this threat to international capitalism so your airline staff is trying to handle twice as many people as usual, or there are tornadoes or thunderstorms or blizzards or little important bits of the plane missing or any of the thousand other reasons (never under any circumstances the fault of the airlines, and rarely explained at the time) why those who go places on airplanes sit and sit and sit and sit in airports, not going anywhere?In this, probably its true aspect, the airport is not a prelude to travel, not a place of transition: it is a stop. A blockage. A constipation. The airport is where you can't go anywhere else. A nonplace in which time does not pass and there is no hope of any meaningful existence. A terminus: the end. The airport offers nothing to any human being except access to the interval between planes.It was Sita Dulip of Cincinnati who first realised this, and so discovered the interplanar technique most of us now use.Her connecting flight from Chicago to Denver had been delayed by some unspeakable, or at any rate untold, m Excerpted from Changing Planes: Stories by Ursula K. Le Guin All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.