The Evolution of Science Fiction discussion

This topic is about
The Left Hand of Darkness
Group Reads 2014
>
June 2014 Group Read - The Left Hand of Darkness
date
newest »

message 1:
by
Jo
(new)
-
rated it 3 stars
May 31, 2014 11:55AM

reply
|
flag




I have the library book in hand, but I have a few others to read before I get to it. I so enjoyed it years ago. I hope I won't be disappointed in the reread.

My full review is here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...
There is a spoiler warning in bold about halfway through the review. Nothing above that is one, though. I'd love to discuss it because so many seem to think this was a great book. It just didn't read that way for me.




An example: "I thought, shivering, that there are things that outweigh comfort, unless one is an old woman or a cat." This is such efficient character building, and yet humorously formed. From this one sentence, we know that Genly is suffering from the cold, that he's having doubts about whether his mission is worth facing this cold, and that not only is he talking himself into further resolve, but he's mocking himself as he does it (and in such a way that we know a bit more of his attitude about women and cats). I read writing like that with delight and awe.
I realize, as I write this, that the book has engaged in a huge amount of explanation, describing the Winter culture, and yet I haven't yet felt at any point that it was "telling" me, or even that it was particularly expository.
It's a big jump, going from the heavily plot-oriented story "Lord of Light" to this very character-focused one, but so far I'm making the transition. I like both approaches, when they're done well.

I read The Left Hand of Darkness a long long time ago. It is one of my all time favorite books. I'm looking forward to rereading it with a little apprehension of being disappointed.
Le Guin is a master at creating fictional cultures. Some of her work is more anthropological fiction than science fiction. I remember the sexual dimorphism as being part and parcel of the culture of the planet, but I don't remember it as being the be all and end all of the book. I remember the book being interspersed with the creation myths of the cold planet. But the thing that made me like the book so much was the the plot - the political intrigue and adventure aspects, and near the end the desperate trek across the glaciers and snowfields.
The left hand of darkness was the first time I heard of the ansible, a device that allows instantaneous communications across vast distances. Orson Scott Card employs ansibles in his Ender series, and I think I've come across it in other works. As far as I know, it originated with Le Guin.
Even though it seems to be getting mixed reviews here, now that I have it in hand I'm anticipating with relish rereading The Left Hand of Darkness towards the end of this month.



Ursula K. LeGuin's strength is her ability to create a culture, a completely fictitious society, which is complex and natural and believable. She writes science fiction. It could as well be called anthropological fiction. The Left Hand of Darkness is an exemplar of that ability.
The story (view spoiler)
Much has been made of the Gethenian's andogeneity, their ambisexual nature, aside from which they are human. There are no genders on Gethen. The people move in and out of maleness and femaleness, and either member of a couple may bear children. This obviously has profound implications on their culture. Many reviewers have dwelt on this aspect of the book, citing the times in which it was written, the burgeoning feminist movement, the awakenings of the gay rights movement, etc. For me it simply was a way that the Gethenians were so very alien from Genly Ai, and from us.
The book is very well written, literary fiction. The chapters are interspersed with little mini-chapters of Gethenian folklore. They help us to understand the alien culture in which Ai finds himself. These literary interstices are short stories by themselves. The story is told mostly through the eyes of Genly Ai, but later in the book, a few chapters are from Estreven's journal. The differing points of view help our understanding while keeping the novel relatively short. The story is not fast paced, but it never lags. It moves steadily along all the way through to reach its tragic climax.
The Left Hand of Darkness well deserves its status as a science fiction classic. All lovers of science fiction should read it.

The closest comparison I can think of is Stranger in a Strange Land, which is a big sloppy, annoying mess. Putting those two books in the same category is like saying that haiku and limericks are both poems. It's true, but it's missing the point.
Books mentioned in this topic
Stranger in a Strange Land (other topics)Lord of Light (other topics)
The Martian (other topics)
The Dispossessed: An Ambiguous Utopia (other topics)
The Lathe of Heaven (other topics)
More...