A Wizard of Earthsea (The Earthsea Cycle, Book 1)

Audio Cassette

English language

Published Jan. 6, 1997 by BBC Pubns.

ISBN:
978-0-563-38916-3
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OCLC Number:
45969044

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reviewed A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin (The Earthsea Cycle, #1)

To make a light is to cast a shadow

I first read the original Earthsea trilogy during my personal "golden age of science-fiction" (i.e. around 12), and I find myself re-reading it about once a decade or so, along with the later novels.

The first book is a coming-of-age story: How a goatherd boy discovered his aptitude for magic, how his pride and arrogance led him astray, how he learned to master his abilities and seek out a way to make up for the terrible evil he unleashed through his recklessness. (Modern readers will probably compare the "boy at a wizard school" aspect to Harry Potter, but that only takes up a couple of chapters.)

It's also to some extent a travelogue of a world with no known continents, only islands, where magic consists of naming someone's or something's true essence, and (more or less) renaming it so as to change it. There's a reason spells are …

reviewed A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin (The Earthsea Cycle, Book 1)

Satisfying ending, but kind of a slog to get there

I think I would've liked this more when I was 14.

I don't know what I was expecting with this, but I guess it wasn't a pretty bog standard fantasy wizard novel with all the trimmings, and more than a few tired tropes.

I suppose you could point out that this novel was written at a time when modern fantasy novel basically meant Lord of the Rings, when a lot of these tropes were new, and with this book Le Guin literally invented the young wizard coming of age subgenre.

You might even excuse the patriarchal society of Earthsea — including the shockingly unchallenged assertion that "women's magic" is weaker than "men's magic" — as a reflection of the patriarchal 1960's US society Le Guin wrote it in. Certainly, in the afterword of the edition I read, Le Guin talks about how she felt writing about a …

Subjects

  • Fantasy
  • Radio
  • Audio: Juvenile