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A review by idajoh
Space Crone by Ursula K. Le Guin
reflective
medium-paced
5.0
Ursula K. Le Guin is my favorite author, so it's no surprise that I loved her essay collection. I will say that not all of the essays are a five star in their own right, but they all deserve to be a part of this book and almost every one of them made an impact on me in some way. (I even forced a friend of mine to read her Bryn Mawr Commencement Speech, which is my favorite essay in this collection, and I will probably force that essay on more people and more of Le Guin's essays on said friend).
I honestly wish I had discovered Le Guin's work while she was still alive, because she is an icon and a comfort to me.
Side note: I did skip "dangerous people", the last essay in this collection, because I want to read Always Coming Home first.
I honestly wish I had discovered Le Guin's work while she was still alive, because she is an icon and a comfort to me.
Side note: I did skip "dangerous people", the last essay in this collection, because I want to read Always Coming Home first.