Tales from Earthsea
Tales from Earthsea is a collection of fantasy stories and essays by American author Ursula K. Le Guin, published by Harcourt in 2001. It accompanies five novels (1968 to 2001) set in the fictional archipelago Earthsea.
Tales from Earthsea won the annual Endeavour Award, for the best book by a writer from the Pacific Northwest,
and Locus Award, Best Collection, for speculative fiction collections.
Two of the five collected stories were previously published, "Darkrose and Diamond" (1999) and "Dragonfly" (1998), and both had been nominated for annual awards.
Contents
Foreword (nonfiction)
The Finder
Darkrose and Diamond (1999*)
The Bones of the Earth
On the High Marsh
Dragonfly (1998*)
A Description of Earthsea (fictional reference material)
"Darkrose and Diamond" was first published in The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, October 1999.
"Dragonfly" was first published in Legends, October 1998.
Themes
All of the stories reinterpret the world of Earthsea. In the original trilogy, Earthsea society in general and the practice of magic in particular are dominated by men. Women can only be witches, which is the despised lowest rank of the magical world, as expressed in the proverb "Weak as women's magic, wicked as women's magic".