Ursula K. Le Guin is the one modern science fiction author who truly
needs no introduction. In the half century since The Left Hand of
Darkness, her works have changed not only the face but the tone and the
agenda of SF, introducing themes of gender, race, socialism, and
anarchism, all the while thrilling readers with trips to strange (and
strangely familiar) new worlds. She is our exemplar of what fantastic
literature can and should be about.
Her Nebula winner The Wild Girls, newly revised and presented here in
book form for the first time, tells of two captive "dirt children" in a
society of sword and silk, whose determination to enter "that possible
even when unattainable space in which there is room for justice" leads
to a violent and loving end.
Plus: Le Guin's scandalous and scorching Harper's essay, "Staying
Awake While We Read," (also collected here for the first time) which
demolishes the pretensions of corporate publishing and the basic
assumptions of capitalism as well. And of course our Outspoken
Interview, which promises to reveal the hidden dimensions of America's
best-known SF author. And delivers.