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364 pages, Paperback
First published July 27, 2017
Humans and stories need each other. We tell them, but they tell us too—reaching with soft hands and wide arms to pull us into their embrace. They do this especially when we have become mired in lives of which we can make no sense. We all need a path, and stories can sometimes usher us back to it.
That's what happened to Hannah Green.
—pp.7-8
He caught up with her by walking, steadily, slowly, consistently. She ran out of steam. He did not. She lost her fury. He'd had none. That's how you win, in the end.
—p.62
We like to think we live in daylight,This observation seems uncharacteristically gloomy for LeGuin, though. If it were up to me, I'd reword this one, to something like "we may think we live in darkness, but always half the world is bathed in light."
but half the world is always dark.
—Epigram for Part 2, p.103, attributed to Ursula K. LeGuin
"I suspect one form of Hell was having a long conversation with Jean-Paul Sartre. Did you ever meet him?"
—p.173
Adults are not distracted for the sake of it, so cut them a little slack. They're all searching for the brake to stop the world spinning, so they can take a moment and catch their breath.
—p.276
But that's enough about us, for now.
How have you been?
—p.356