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The Telling [Paperback]

Ursula K. Le Guin (Author)
3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (54 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 9, 2001
"In The Telling...Le Guin combines the gifts of a pure storyteller at the height of her powers with a wise and passionate heart and the disciplined, ceaselessly questioning mind of a true philosopher." (Peter S. Beagle, author of The Last Unicorn)

From award-winning author Ursula K. Le Guin comes a highly anticipated addition to her acclaimed Hainish cycle, "a social anthropology of the future, fascinating and utterly believable." (Peter S. Beagle) Once a culturally rich world, the planet Aka has been utterly transformed by technology. But an official observer from Earth named Sutty has learned of a group of outcasts who live in the wilderness. They still believe in the ancient ways and still practice its lost religion-the Telling. Intrigued by their beliefs, Sutty joins them on a sacred pilgrimage into the mountains...and into the dangerous terrain of her own heart, mind, and soul.

"Spellbinding." (The Denver Post)

"Sings true in every line...simple and profound." (Los Angeles Times)

"The Telling will make you anticipate tomorrow a bit differently than you did yesterday." (Denver Rocky Mountain News)

"Powerfully moving...This is humanist SF at its best, Le Guin in top form." (Faren Miller, Locus)

Frequently Bought Together

The Telling + The Word for World is Forest + Worlds of Exile and Illusion: Three Complete Novels of the Hainish Series in One Volume--Rocannon's World; Planet of Exile; City of Illusions
Price For All Three: $36.99

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Earthling Sutty has been living a solitary, well-protected life in Dovza City on the planet Aka as an official Observer for the interstellar Ekumen. Insisting on all citizens being pure "producer-consumers," the tightly controlled capitalist government of Aka--the Corporation--is systematically destroying all vestiges of the ancient ways: "The Time of Cleansing" is the chilling term used to describe this era. Books are burned, the old language and calligraphy are outlawed, and those caught trying to keep any part of the past alive are punished and then reeducated. Frustrated in her attempts to study the linguistics and literature of Aka's cultural past, Sutty is sent upriver to the backwoods town of Okzat-Ozkat. Here she is slowly charmed by the old-world mountain people, whose still waters, she gradually realizes, run very deep. But whether their ways constitute a religion, ancient traditions, philosophy, or passive, political resistance, Sutty is not sure. Delving ever deeper into her hosts' culture, Sutty finds herself on a parallel spiritual quest, as well.

With quiet linguistic humor (Dovza citizens are passionate about their hot bitter beverage, akakafi--the ubiquitous Corporation brand is called Starbrew), dark references to the dangers of restricted cultural, political, and social freedom, and beautifully visualized worlds, award-winning author Ursula K. Le Guin pens her latest in the Hainish cycle, which includes The Dispossessed and The Left Hand of Darkness. Le Guin explores her characters and societies with such care, such thoughtfulness, her novels call out for slow, deep attention. --Emilie Coulter --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

In this virtually flawless new tale set in her Hainish universe, Le Guin (The Left Hand of Darkness; Four Ways to Forgiveness) sends a young woman from Earth on her first mission, to the planet Aka as an Observer for the Ekumen. Although well prepared for her role, Sutty has been horribly scarred by her past. She grew up gay in a North America badly damaged by ecological stupidity and the excesses of a fundamentalist state religion called Unism. Traveling to Aka, she expected (and had been trained) to deal with a peaceful, essentially static culture based on an ancient, all-encompassing belief system akin to Taoism and known as the Telling. When she arrived, however, she discovered that during the decades it took her to reach the planet, Aka's culture has been radically transformed. The Telling has been all but banned, replaced by a soulless form of corporate communism. It becomes Sutty's task to take a harrowing journey into the high mountains, searching for the last, priceless depository of Akan traditional culture before it can be destroyed. As Le Guin notes in her preface, similarities to China during the Great Leap Forward are not entirely coincidental. Although this is a political and philosophical novel of the purest sort, it is anything but dry. With an anthropologist's eye, Le Guin develops her Akan culture in great detail, as she does her characters. Sutty is an entirely successful viewpoint character, a quirky mixture of competence and intense emotion. The Monitor, her primary nemesis on Aka, is nearly as compelling. This is a novel that aficionados of morally serious SF won't want to miss. (Sept.) FYI: Le Guin is the winner of several Nebula and Hugo awards for outstanding SF, as well as of a National Book Award, a Pushcart Prize, a Newbery Honor and the World Fantasy Award for Life Achievement.
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Ace Trade (October 9, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0441008631
  • ISBN-13: 978-0441008636
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.2 x 0.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 4.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (54 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,610,863 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

54 Reviews
5 star:
 (15)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:
 (14)
2 star:
 (8)
1 star:
 (8)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.3 out of 5 stars (54 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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48 of 53 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Welcome return to Ekumen in novel form, September 5, 2000
By A Customer
This review is from: The Telling (Hardcover)
"The Telling," like Le Guin's 1972 novella "The World for Word is Forest," is much more about our own world than the world it explores.

Here, a lesbian woman of East Indian descent, Sutty, signs on to be an ambassador for the Hainish Ekumen (the Hainish originally seeded human life on all the member planets) when her lover is killed by fundamentalist terrorists on earth.

But in transit, relativity plays a cruel trick on her: In the 60 years she's been traveling in a Nearly-As-Fast-As-Light starship, the planet Aka has adopted a severe, technophilic society not unlike that of Maoist China. Indeed, the Corporation State has done its best to eradicate its previous culture, a Tao-like, creedless system of wisdom known as "The Telling."

Sutty eventually travels to a distant, mountainous place where people secretly maintain their old system, and there she discovers how her own planet Terra may have catalyzed the culture-destroying changes.

As in Le Guin's 1969 classic, "The Left Hand of Darkness," the protagonist enters the society hoping to learn, and eventually undertakes a journey, this time deep into the heart of the high mountains. Here, the village of Ozkat-Ozkat is sharply reminiscent of Chinese-occupied Tibet.

Le Guin is brilliant at this sort of thing, and while the story is quite simple and takes a while to catch fire, the denouement is moving, engaging and illuminating. I still think she has a penchant for somewhat cold and distant, even a bit sterile, characters, but that detracts only a bit from this tale.

It's not as adventurous as "Left Hand," not as detailed in its world-building as "The Dispossessed," and lacking the action of "...World is Forest," but it's still a thoughtful, entertaining read.

"The Telling" is a meditation on cultural decimation, fundamentalism, colonialism and even gay rights, Earthly issues, that just happens to be played out on a distant world.

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25 of 26 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Pay attention, and the book reads well, November 15, 2001
By 
Catherine Carter (Cullowhee, NC USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Telling (Paperback)
I came to review this, even though I got my copy before the book's original publication, because I've been teaching *A Fisherman of the Inland Sea* this morning and watched it fall flat. Since it's one of my favorite stories in the world, that stung; and it made me remember how the reviews here stung, a year or so back, and want to defend Le Guin, if not to my students (being defensive is the kiss of death to teaching) then to someone.

So: *The Telling*. Some of the critiques here are fair; there is, perhaps appropriately, more telling than showing, and the "spare" language characteristic of Le Guin is sparer than ever. That the moral, or anyway one of the morals, that trashing Tao in favor of Mao wasn't too smart, is very clear is also true. I'm not sure why or whether that's an inherently bad thing; but there are less evident "morals" too. That the "evil" new culture isn't actually evil is one of them; the problem was that no one knew what that culture expected of the Ekumen. The motif of "footsteps on the air", the mourning for the value we all throw away, is a major issue, more major even than the capital-M moral that Tao is Good. Or how about the idea that knowledge and stories have inherent value, and that it's not degrading to bargain for them and pay for them? If we took that "moral" to heart from *The Telling*, maybe our teachers and nannies and daycare providers--yes, and writers--would be paid as much as the people who build strip malls and destroy the world.

But (here's the defense) I certainly can't agree that we know nothing about the characters; on the contrary, we learn a great deal about the central character, Sutty, from deft handling of remarkably succinct evidence. How, someone asks, does Sutty feel about sex? About Pao? But these feelings are presented with great lucidity and in the deadpan voice of someone who knows how great and lasting grief can be. Sutty, of course, loves Pao, whom she has lost, without any real cessation either of mourning or of love; and so great is the love that the mourning is moved to the background, because Pao is so large a part of Sutty. But Sutty is so used to this, and takes it so calmly, that it's easy to miss. We are told that though her throat aches in telling of the death of Pao--her own telling, and a turning point in the book--that that didn't matter; it always would ache. She can have casual sex, and both enjoy it and feel essentially nothing from it, because sex that's not with Pao can ONLY be casual. It means nothing, it neither degrades Pao's memory nor sharpens it. Perhaps this is truer than most of us want to admit for most sex: the only significance it has is the significance we give it. If our country, with its odd combination of teenaged salaciousness and puritanical hypocrisy, took THIS moral to heart, maybe we'd spend less time talking about our leaders' sexual peccadilloes and more about what value they're really offering.

In short, I like this book. It's dead on about mourning, love, the value of stories, the perils of absolutism, the need for more mindful cooking practices, and lots of other things. While there are some valid reasons not to like this book, I think a reasonable number of them, though not all, boil down to lack of attention. And one can't really blame Le Guin for that.

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30 of 33 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A Vibrant Literary Experience, November 11, 2001
By 
This review is from: The Telling (Paperback)
In this book Ursula K. Le Guin creates a world where technology is the all seeing, all doing God of the people. A world where the old ways are condemned and literature and art are "corpse rotten" and have to be destroyed. There are no books to read and no history to remember. Only a consumer-producer society is acceptable, and anyone who deviates from this path is condemned, punished and forcibly re-educated. Enter Sutty Dass a young girl of East Indian descent who is desperate to hold onto the past whilst living in the future. On the plant Aka as an official observer she gets the chance to see the past as it used to be, in fragments so tantalizingly small you can only get a taste of what used to be. But Sutty is an intelligent young woman and she realizes very quickly that the old ways are not as dead as the technology-controlled government would like to believe and an underground system of "telling" the past has sprung up in order for people to remember what once was. What starts as a job of work for Sutty, becomes a spiritual quest for redemption in the guise of story telling and mystical encounters. Sutty herself is being reborn from the flames of the past, as her name implies, as Suttee means death by fire for widows and Sutty is a widow of sorts. We find ourselves gently drawn into this illicit world of Guru's, mystics and ancient wise ones, whilst looking over our shoulders for the ever-present danger of Government Monitors whose task it is stamp on everything to do with the past. We are eventually led to a hidden library high in the Aka mountains and it is here that Sutty learns the true meaning of the past and how she as an outsider can help redress the balance for those who hanker for the old days, and those who fear the loss of technology. A vibrant book, filled with laughter and tears, and a host of characters who are larger than life and totally memorable. This is a novel for those readers who like a book to get their teeth into, a novel, which makes them think and wonder, and then think so more. An excellent and understated read that deserves six stars out of five in my opinion.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
WHEN SUTTY WENT back to Earth in the daytime, it was always to the village. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
boss maz, maz couple, barrow man, bean meal
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Dovza City, Uncle Hurree, Corporation State, Lap of Silong, Odiedin Manma, Sotyu Ang, First Observers, Ottiar Uming, Maz Elyed, The Arbor, Golden Mountain, Penan Teran, Unist Fathers, Advanced Exercises, Eastern Isles, Holy Wars, Maz Uming
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