Tehanu

The Last Book of Earthsea , #4

First edition, 226 pages

English language

Published March 1990 by Atheneum.

ISBN:
978-0-689-31595-4
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OCLC Number:
317496016
ISFDB ID:
7656

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The stink of burning filled the wind, as with a hissing roar the dragon, turning to land on the shelf of rock, breathed out a sigh of fire. Its feet clashed on the rock. The thorny tail, writhing, rattled, and the wings stormed and rustled as they folded down to the mailed flanks. The head turned slowly. The dragon gazed straight at the woman from yellow eyes under armored carapaces wide-set above the narrow nose and flaring, fuming nostrils. And her small, soft face and dark eyes gazed straight at it.

The dragon turned its head aside a little so that she was not destroyed when it did speak, or perhaps it laughed — a great "Hah!" of orange flame.

Tenat saw then the man astride its back, his hands clenched on the rust-dark mail of the dragon's neck, his head bowed as if he were asleep.

39 editions

reviewed Tehanu by Ursula K. Le Guin (Earthsea Cycle, #4)

Deep Roots and Burning Questions

There's a sharp break between the first three Earthsea books and the later ones. The original trilogy had been a classic of young-adult high fantasy for almost 20 years before Le Guin returned to the world with a more grown-up perspective. The first three books can be read as heroic adventures. This one's about the ordinary people, the ones caught underfoot when wizards and heroes and villains fight against each other.

And while there are still big fantastic questions like the connection between humans and dragons, it delves into weightier but more personal issues like child abuse, disability, misogyny and cruelty.

A Life More Ordinary

Tehanu picks up Tenar's story 25 years after she left Atuan with Ged. She's since walked away from the life of priestesses, mages and kings, and lived an ordinary woman's life as a farmer on Gont, marrying, raising children, widowed, and as …

Tales from Earthsea.

Jeg likte denne boka godt. Det er en samling med litt lengre noveller som i hovedsak utdyper Øyverdenen til LeGuin. Vi får vite mer om historien bak magikerskolen på Roke, hvordan den ble grunnlagt og hva som gikk feil. Vi får også møte figurer fra de tidligere bøkene og får vite mer om dem. For eksempel om Ogions bakgrunn i The Bones of the Earth.

Novellegrepet fungerer veldig bra. Jeg bruker å like bøker der separate noveller bindes sammen av felles hendelser og felles personer. Det gir muligheten til å presentere kompliserte hendelser og personer ettersom man kan oppleve dem fra mange ulike vinkler. Det er noe av det jeg likte med Junot Diaz' This is how you lose her (som jeg helt sikkert burde lese igjen).

Etter å ha lest den siste novellen Dragonfly er jeg nysgjerrig på hvordan den kobler videre til den sjette og …

Subjects

  • Fantasy