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Conference noted::sf

Title:Arcana Caelestia
Notice:Directory listings are in topic 2
Moderator:NETRIX::thomas
Created:Thu Dec 08 1983
Last Modified:Fri Jun 06 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1300
Total number of notes:18728

493.0. "LeGuin's Always Coming Home" by PROSE::WAJENBERG () Wed Jun 24 1987 17:30

    Ursula K. LeGuin has come out with a new book titled "Always Coming
    Home."  It is not a novel or an anthology.  The introduction is
    titled "Toward an Archeology of the Future," and that is what the
    book is really about.
    
    LeGuin has made up a society living in northern California several
    centuries from now.  They resemble northwest American Indians in
    many ways, but have a sliding scale of technology, using as high
    a level as they want.  Their world is described in several short
    stories, a novella, diagrams, charts, anthropological essays and
    reports, poems, and even recipes.
    
    I recommend the book, but be advised that it is NOT action-adventure.
    Far from it.  It is a book for browsing.  It is also very well-
    written.
    
    Earl Wajenberg
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493.1couldn't get into itBISTRO::WATSONthis must be the placeThu Jun 25 1987 04:228
>    I recommend the book, but be advised that it is NOT action-adventure.
>    Far from it.  It is a book for browsing.  It is also very well-
>    written.
    
    I'm not sure that I recommend it. But I don't recommend much recent
    LeGuin either. I start off thinking, like .0, that it's well-written,
    but then after a few pages think to myself that well-written sf
    makes you want to keep reading. This doesn't.
493.2xref 345BISTRO::WATSONthis must be the placeThu Jun 25 1987 04:394
    Just noticed - note 345 was a call for opinions on this book and
    one other.
    
    	Andrew.
493.3Still a great bookCAVER::LEAVITTEric Leavitt HPS/CAD 297-5221Thu Jun 25 1987 14:1426
    I recently finished "Always Coming Home", and I found it fascinating.
    However, I would be very hesitant to recommend it.  I definately
    wouldn't call it science fiction.  I also didn't finish it - probably
    the first book that I loved that I didn't finish - but it just doesn't
    require it.  It reads like a collection of short stories.
    
    ** Small Spoiler **
    
    The environment in the story could be given a very science fictiony
    description when you find out that the setting is post holocaust,
    and that totally automated high technology exists in the society
    portrayed.  However, these are not major elements of the story,
    and these are explored only minimally.
    
    ** End Spoiler **
    
    I interpret the book as an exploration of an extremely spiritually
    oriented world view.  The main culture portrayed interprets the
    world around them in terms of spirits, and their lives are shaped
    around symbols and traditional ceremonies.  This society is portrayed
    very favorably, in particular when it is contrasted to a neighboring
    culture that is very warlike and achievment oriented.
    
    It is an interesting exploration of possible cultures using the
    "archeology of the future" gimmick which I found to be cute.  It
    is definately NOT an adventure story.
493.4Different SF, but still SFPROSE::WAJENBERGThu Jun 25 1987 15:419
    I think it qualifies as science fiction if you allow the science
    in question to be cultural anthropology.  LeGuin has carefully composed
    the Kesh culture from elements existing in real cultures and worked
    out the consequences fo the lives of individuals.
    
    I also think the post-holocaust setting of the culture is important.
    In many ways, the Kesh are a reaction to our own present culture.
    
    Earl Wajenberg
493.5get the music tooVIDEO::TEBAYNatural phenomena invented to orderFri Jun 26 1987 16:0512
    I enjoyed it as a kind of a guide to a future world. I
    suspect that there will be some stories set in it in the future.
    
    BTW if you bought the paperback you didn't get the cassete which
    has some of the music and poetry on it. I think it adds to the
    "feeling" of the world greatly.
    
    I also think the implications of the "NET" surviving and being
    a major force in culture is a truly awesome concept.
    
    What if all that was left of DEC was the notes files?