The Birthday of the World
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Birthday of the World is a collection of short fiction by Ursula K. Le Guin, and first published in 2003 by Gollancz (Britain) an imprint of the Orion Publishing Group, with ISBN 0-575-07539-2. All of the stories except "Paradises Lost" were previously published individually elsewhere.
The collection was also published in New York by Perennial in 2003 with ISBN 0-06-050906-6.
[edit] Contents
- Foreword
- "Coming of Age in Karhide" - 1995 in New Legends ed. G. Bear. Takes place on Gethen the planet of The Left Hand of Darkness which is part of the Ekumen.
- A young Karhidian loses "her" virginity during "her" first phase of coming into heat, called a "kemmer". The gender is in quotations because most Gethenians only become female or male during kemmer and then return to their neutral/hermaphroditic state.
- "The Matter of Seggri" - Spring 1994 in Crank!. Takes place on Seggri of the Ekumen.
- The discovery, exploration, and ultimate alteration of a planet characterised by extreme gender imbalance and segregation.
- "Unchosen Love" - Fall 1994 in Amazing Stories. Takes place on O of the Ekumen which is the same planet as the title story of "A Fisherman of the Inland Sea". Society there is built around the sedoretu - a marriage involving four people.
- About a meek man and meek woman, who are in relationships with strong-willed man and woman respectively. The meek find solace in each other's company, an unexpected relationship catalyzed by mysterious encounters.
- "Mountain Ways" - August 1996 in Asimov's Science Fiction. Also on O.
- Two women who are in love, but who cannot find suitable partners to establish a sedoretu, decide to deceive the other parties to a marriage by disguising one of the women as a man. Complex and beautiful story.
- "Solitude" - December 1994 in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. Takes place on Eleven-Soro on the fringes of the Ekumen. Society has fragmented - men and women live apart, and adult women do not even enter each others houses. The story is told by the daughter of a mobile of the Ekumen who grows up in this society.
- "Old Music and the Slave Women" - 1999 in Far Horizons ed. R. Silverberg. Another story in the same dual-planet system of Werel and Yeowe as "Four Ways to Forgiveness" of the Ekumen.
- "The Birthday of the World" - June 2000 in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction. May or may not be of the Ekumen. The story depicts a society where the hereditary rulers are "God" - and how the society is disrupted from inside and outside.
- "Paradises Lost" - First publication. Not of the Ekumen.
|
|||||||||||||||||

