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The Found and the Lost: The Collected…
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The Found and the Lost: The Collected Novellas of Ursula K. Le Guin (original 2016; edition 2016)

by Ursula K. Le Guin (Author)

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412561,058 (4.1)15
This book is first time that all of Le Guin novellas have been collected in a single volume. Featuring thirteen unforgettable stories, this literary treasure is easily one of the most anticipated collections of the year. In addition to more than 800 pages of extraordinary storytelling, this book also includes an introduction from the legendary author.… (more)
Member:DCavin
Title:The Found and the Lost: The Collected Novellas of Ursula K. Le Guin
Authors:Ursula K. Le Guin (Author)
Info:Saga Press (2016), Edition: 1st Edition, 816 pages
Collections:Your library
Rating:***1/2
Tags:fiction, sci-fi, fantasy, female, new

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The Found and the Lost: The Collected Novellas of Ursula K. Le Guin by Ursula K. Le Guin (2016)

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Showing 5 of 5
Some novellas set in science fiction world of Hainish expansion, some set on fantasy world of Earthsea. All excellent
  ritaer | Jul 19, 2022 |
As it turned out, I'd already read these in other volumes.

But it's Ursula le Guin, whose stories always reward rereading. So I loved reading them all again.

The last novella in the book, Paradises Lost, is one of my favourites. About a multi-generational space colonization of an earth-like world, it's one of the stories I think about whenever I wonder if the Hawkings and Musks of the world have thought through their "we must colonize the universe!" conviction. What if, le Guin asks, the generations born on the spaceship have no desire to leave it? What if that's their definition of a perfect world, and as outside the ship has been associated with vacuum and death, the thought of leaving the ship to settle a planet terrifies them? How would anyone ever control the psychologies and thought processes of multiple generations of thousands of human beings aboard a spaceship getting farther and farther away from the rest of humanity every day?

But they're all gorgeous. Every story in the volume is a gem. If you've never read her and you want to try, this is a great introduction to all of the genres she's written in: you've got Earthsea, you've got the Hainish cycle, and you've got lots of standalone sci fi, fantasy and realism. ( )
1 vote andrea_mcd | Mar 10, 2020 |
I've been taking my time with this 800-page volume of Le Guin's novellas, the better to savor them. Some of these will be familiar to those who know Hain and Earthsea, But others take on such topics as the multigenerational space voyage, and all make for excellent reading. Recommended most heartily. ( )
  JBD1 | Mar 23, 2019 |
First time reading Le Guin. I will use each novella to come up with stars for the book rating:
Vaster than Empires and More Slow 4.0
Buffalo Gals 3.0
Hernes 3.0
Seggri 3.0
Another Story or a Fisherman of the Inland Sea 2.5
Forgiveness Day 4.0
A Man of the People 3.5
Woman's Liberation 3.5
Old Music and the Slave Women 4.0
The Finder 4.0
Oh High Marsh 4.0
Dragonfly 4.0
Paradises Lost 4.0

Glad to have read a book(s) by here, have seen the name for years, but never read. ( )
  DCavin | Sep 10, 2017 |
For many years, I avoided Ursula LeGuin, on the mistaken assumption that she was essentially a fantasy author, by virtue of her Wizard of Earthsea novels. It was not until later that I discovered her science fiction work and grew to enjoy it immensely. But LeGuin is not your prototypical science fiction (or it turns out, fantasy) author. She does not write space opera, but instead focuses on character development and human (or alien) interaction. You could label her work anthropological or sociological science fiction, with the fact that aliens, or space travel, or wizards are involved, becoming almost secondary.

This collection of thirteen novellas (very close to short stories) is a perfect example of her writing. There may have been a couple of duds (most particularly Hernes and to a lesser degree Buffalo Gals), but by and large there is good stuff here. Three of the stories involve elements of her Hainish science fiction novels, featuring the planet Weres, where slavery is practiced. In this set of three stories, the reader is taken through a planetary and societal evolution in which slaves are first freed, only to see the women become cultural slaves. Again, only nominally science fiction, to the extent that we are dealing with an alien species in a different time and galaxy.

Three other stories are set in the author’s Earthsea world, and while I am not a big fan of fantasy, like her science fiction, this fantasy is not heavy handed with extreme magic and fire breathing dragons. There is magic and there are dragons, but they are very subtly exercised or only mentioned in passing. The story is in the characters and their interaction.

The final story, Paradise Lost, is the best in my opinion. Perhaps the most “science fiction” of the lot, it is set on a multi-generational, multi-ethnic starship as it approaches its destination. The story is outstanding as the author explores the various tensions and societal developments that can emerge in an isolated population, five generations removed from any knowledge or empathy for the civilization that launched their voyage; an excellent ending to a very nice collection. ( )
1 vote santhony | Dec 8, 2016 |
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This book is first time that all of Le Guin novellas have been collected in a single volume. Featuring thirteen unforgettable stories, this literary treasure is easily one of the most anticipated collections of the year. In addition to more than 800 pages of extraordinary storytelling, this book also includes an introduction from the legendary author.

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