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A Fisherman Of The Inland Sea (2005)

A Fisherman of the Inland Sea (2005)

Book Info

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Series
Rating
3.95 of 5 Votes: 4
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ISBN
0060763515 (ISBN13: 9780060763510)
Language
English
Publisher
harper perennial

About book A Fisherman Of The Inland Sea (2005)

Ursula Le Guin is best known for her fantasy and her science fiction writings, though she also writes other fiction as well as poetry, articles and reviews. The short stories in this 1994 collection, while firmly in the SF genre, also demonstrate her ability to compose in various tones, from light to dark, from gentle humour to philosophical musings. Originally published in various periodicals between 1983 and 1994, the narratives are clearly placed in context by an excellent introduction in which she not only discusses the tales but also mounts a spirited defence of SF as a genre, a defence which twenty years on may be less urgent though no less valid or effective.She explains that she experiments with SF by using the form to explore character and human relationships, rather than exploring the ‘scientism’ and elitist technocracies that much traditional ‘hard’ SF was associated with and which put off the unconverted. She also denies that SF (and by extension, I suspect, fantasy) is necessarily escapist; instead, by exploring human characteristics, even or especially in alien humanoids, she throws light on our own humanity, humaneness, human-ness; she focuses on the potential strengths of SF, most particularly on a quality that is not always attached to this genre: beauty. There is no doubting the beauty of many of these stories. “The Kerastion” (the name is for ‘an instrument that cannot be heard’) concerns the impermanence of a society’s art created for their divinity, and how sacrilege may be committed when an individual tries to make sculptures that are not transitory. His funeral is accompanied by music played on a ceremonial flute made by his sister, soundless except to the ears of the dead. This haunting tale feels like an anthropological commentary in that there is no implied value judgement given on what transpires, but it is told with poetic sensitivity and a sympathy for the individuals involved. Preceding “The Kerastion” is “The Rock That Changed Things”, another story that verges on the fantasy genre but which has a very political purpose, dealing with gender and caste issues for instance. There is also the strange human obsession with unusual stones, as here where the placement of coloured stones within a pattern has a significance which only the initiates have the right to interpret. Aspects of this story reminded me of Hesse’s The Glass Bead Game or Robert Graves’ short story “The Shout”, but only distantly; and the presence of a third eye in these beings reminded me that this was no earth-bound tale.Another aspect of SF that Le Guin plays with is humour. As she herself says, ‘Is anything deadlier than somebody explaining a joke?’ And so there is nothing to explain in “The First Contact with the Gorgonids”, about tourists coming face to face with extra-terrestrials in the Australian outback, other than that the title and the label suggest a inversion of the more familiar Perseus myth. As for the earliest story in the book, “The Ascent of the North Face”, that transposes the typical names for obstacles and camps on mountaineering expeditions to the more domestic setting whence many of the terms originated; it may be a one-joke story, but it is staunchly and consistently maintained.It’s less easy to say precisely what “Newton’s Sleep” is about. The title is a reference to a poem by Blake which includes the line ‘May God us keep | From single vision, and Newton’s sleep!’ Ike is part of a group, the SPES Society (named for the Special Earth Satellite), which eventually leaves a devastated earth forever to orbit around it. Discussion and argument arises amongst the travellers about the necessity of learning about Earth geology or even aping Earth culture, such as in the station’s architecture, when the intention is that they will never return. Despite a supposedly rational ethos, the satellite’s inhabitants increasingly see ghosts and find their environment changing, suggesting that you can take humans away from Earth but you can’t take Earth away from humans.“Newton’s Sleep” is a deeply-layered story. Ike Rose’s family all have Jewish names like Noah and Esther, which suggests a Biblical aspect. Ike, of course, is named after the patriarch Isaac, who went blind in later life, while Ike’s own daughter Esther is becoming similarly afflicted. Newton was another Isaac, a complex thinker with heterogeneous beliefs, one of whose accomplishments was to institute the science of optics. Because he helped lay the foundations for the Enlightenment pursuit of science, he was credited by the mystic poet Blake with only following Reason, the ‘single vision’ of his poem. Does this imply an anti-Science stance by Le Guin? Not at all. Into the mix comes a reference to Goya’s etching The Sleep of Reason Engenders Monsters, a self-portrait of the artist being assailed by beasties. The text attached to Goya’s work actually tells us that “Fantasy abandoned by reason produces impossible monsters: united with her, she is the mother of the arts and the origin of their marvels.” In other words, humans need fantasy as much as rational thought in order to create and innovate, in order to be truly human. “Newton’s Sleep” is not an anti-Science diatribe, then, but a plea for combining two human qualities in order to be free of nightmares. The final pages quote an almost biblical message from his daughter Esther: ‘I am going up in the mountains for a while.’ In his desperation to find her in the metallic shell of the orbiting satellite he finds his perception of reality altering, fantasy and reason somehow united. The SPES has become a little like a Pandora’s Box: when everything else has escaped what remains is Hope; and in Latin spes of course means precisely this.The remaining three stories are part of the Hainish Cycle, Le Guin’s SF universe. Having many years ago conceived the ansible, a device for instant communication across light-years, and seeing it taken up by other writers as a convenient plot-device, she here devises churten theory, which allows for transilience, a way for humans to instantaneously travel across vast distances in space, and much faster than NAFAL speed (Nearly As Fast As Light) would allow. She’s not interested in the nuts-and-bolts rationale behind churten theory, just the impact it has on people and their psyches. To start with, “The Shobies’ Story” is about a group of ten travellers attempting transilience for the first time who find that their individual versions about what happens on arrival are at variance with each other. This is more than just the unreliability of eyewitness memory as it seems to imply that reality changes according to perception. Can the crew of the Shoby find a narrative that they all agree with?“Dancing to Ganam” is a further exploration of the application of churten theory, this time involving fewer voyagers led by the charismatic figure of Dalzul to the planet of Ganam. This time the dissonance of different perceptions cannot be resolved, does not result in unison but in a fall that inevitably follows hubris. Where there is no clear communication a common narrative can’t come into being. The last and longest tale “Another Story” is another step along the development of churten technology, set on the planet O. It begin with a traditional tale A Fisherman of the Inland Sea, which to us has elements of the literary fairytale Undine and similar accounts of mortals inadvertently spending centuries in the land of the fairies. Put simply, “Another Story” is as the author tells us an ‘experiment with time-travel’ which ‘explores the possibility of two stories about the same person in the same time being completely different and completely true’. Hideo travels from his home planet to help develop churten technology, but something goes wrong. Will he not only become estranged from family and friends but also lose the potential lover he knew in childhood?Le Guin describes many of these tales as metafictions, or stories about stories. This quality of tales-within-tales is part of what makes her writing special, along with the lucidity of her prose and the timelessness of her style. Above all, you get the impression that she cares about her creations, deeply flawed as many of them are, and that caring is something that she generously invites the reader to share.http://wp.me/p2oNj1-mk

I always hate to see reviews of books of short stories which don't give a table of contents. So I'll follow the Golden Rule, and list all the stories as I read them.The Acknowledgments are simply a description of when and where the stories first appeared.Introduction: "On Not Reading Science Fiction"--Frequent readers of LeGuin will have read most of these comments before. But because it was tailored to this particular book, it includes background material on each of the stories. It would probably be best to treat it as an afterword, if this is the first time you're reading the stories, to avoid spoilers(1) The First Contact with The Gorgonids: The Gorgonids are peacefully setting up their landing camp in the Australian Outback, when they're pestered by an obnoxious American tourist. Ok, so maybe they overreact...(2) Newton's Sleep: A space colony is haunted by ghosts. Several of the premises are terrifying, including rapidly spreading plagues back on Earth. I have to say that the plan for the biosphere is not one I've ever heard of before. Why would you make a biosphere with no life other than humans? How could you sustain it? Anyone who has watched 'daily' operations on the ISS knows how hard they're finding it without (many) plants or other animals. And that's with a crew that's never larger than 15, even with visiting spacecraft.(3) The Rock That Changed Things: An oppressed class finds new meaning in old messages.(4) The Kerastion: It's not clear from the beginning of the story what the 'sin' of the recently deceased is. When it's revealed, it seems rather trivial, by our standards. The sister and chief mourner finds no conflict with the standard: she simply can't understand what went wrong. And it's evident that the man himself was not a real revolutionary, and considered himself a sinner.(5)The Shobies' Story: What if the story you tell about reality is more fundamental than the reality itself?(6) Dancing to Ganam: If you get offered a role as a god, make sure you read the fine print before accepting.(7) A Fisherman of The Inland Sea: I always wonder about the less-documented worlds of the Ekumen. This story, while focusing on the experiences of a time-traveler, also explains cultural and social practices in an area on the planet O. It focuses on marriage practices especially (both heterosexual and homosexual), because such practices are very important to the local people (who all seem to be amateur and/or professional marriage brokers), but also because it's very important to the narrator. The narrator also has a fairly strong understanding of what needs explaining to outsiders, because (one of) his mother(s) was a Mobile for the Ekumen, and born and raised on Terra (in Japan, it's implied, or at least she learned Japanese folktales. But then so did I, and I've never been to Japan.).One thing I've always liked about LeGuin's stories: they're often not set in those accursed 'interesting times' the sage warns us against. The protagonists often live in stable cultures. They grow up, go to school, take on careers and families, and make decisions about what they will do after due deliberation. This doesn't mean there's no conflict in their lives, of course. But it does mean that they're rarely herded from disaster to calamity by imprudent choices. Quite refreshing, I've always thought.

Do You like book A Fisherman Of The Inland Sea (2005)?

I think that the short story that this book was named for, the Fisherman of the Inland Sea, is my favorite short story of all time. .. although it is a beautiful story in its own right it also struck me as a seamless contemporary re-working of a well-known Japanese fairy-tale . Reading this somehow helped me get over my sense of being displaced when I first moved to the South ten years ago.. Ursula Le Guin navigates cultures and the movements of the soul with such grace, I am awed.. I am so grateful for her writing.
—Miyo Kachi

While reading this book the first time, I put it down after "The Shobies Story" and sighed with pleasure...my husband heard me and asked "what's that about?" I told him that I had just finished the MOST...AMAZING...SCIENCE...FICTION...SHORT...STORY...EVER! At that point I still hadn't finished the book...Simply the BEST sci-fi short story collection I've ever read. I haven't updated my status on this because I have re-read and savored the entire thing about 4 times since starting. It's like being a regular at a really great restaurant...and I'm ashamed that my weak analogy truly doesn't do the author or this book justice. If you like sci-fi, you will love this book. If you love character-driven fiction with true connection between characters and a continual examination of introspection and humanity. If you have ever read time-travel books and found them lacking, you will find thE concept of transillience in this book to rise above time travel themes.Awesome!
—Kendra

This is a beautiful collection of short science fiction stories. While I did not 'like' every one of the stories, Le Guin's writing ability, her ideas and her characters, are both thought-provoking and entertaining. And, thankfully, she is able to create complex worlds without giving us an information dump and expecting everyone to take a quiz at the end of the book.My favorite in the collection is actually 'The Rock that Changed Things,' which is set in more of a fantasy world than the more typical sci-fi/space travel worlds of several of the other stories. In a quiet and almost understated way it shows how perception can create oppression- and revolution.Glad I picked up the book at the thrift :)
—Veronica

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