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City of Illusions (Modern Women Writers) [Paperback]

Ursula Le Guin
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Product details

  • Paperback: 232 pages
  • Publisher: Longman; New edition edition (2 Aug 1989)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0582025168
  • ISBN-13: 978-0582025165
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 5,463,701 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Ursula K. Le Guin
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Product Description

Product Description

Each volume in the "Modern Women Writers" series offers a complete fictional work by a contemporary female writer, which reflects a different culture and set of experiences. The books contain extensive study material and assignments at a range of levels for GCSE English and English literature courses. In addition to pre-reading activities and notes, the novels contain a reading log with ideas for group and individual assignments to help pupils comprehend the text. This is the story of a journey of discovery - a story full of riddles, allegories and echoes of ancient cultures; of Utopia, a fantastic city. It is a story of the discovery of many alien cultures in a "far-future Earth", of identity and self-knowledge by Falk, the central character, and of what is essentially human and civilizing in us all. The text is also suitable for adult students taking English examinations and for overseas students.

About the Author

Ursula Le Guin was born in 1929 into an academic family. She was educated at Radcliffe and Columbia, taking degrees in Romance Literatures of the Middle Ages and Renaissance. She began publishing sf stories in the early 1960s and is the author of The Left Hand of Darkness and The Dispossessed, two of the most celebrated novels in sf. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
Older Le Guin 6 Aug 2007
Format:Paperback
City of Illusions is an early book from Le Guin (published 1967). It is set in her Hainish worlds, however. The story takes place on future Earth, after some kind of apocalypse has wiped most of humanity out and the rest live down to earth under the rule of the Shing.

A mysterious alien man appears from the woods. He's lost his memory and learns a new life like a child. Is he a Shing, a tool of the Shing or a friend? He wants to find out and eventually sets out to the city of Shing.

The book is divided into two parts: first is the man's journey through the Northern American plains to the Shing city Es Toch - the city of illusions. There he starts to unravel his past and decipher what the Shing actually want. It's a web of lies and deceit and quite an challenge.

While City of Illusions is far from being Le Guin's greatest work, it is a pleasant little book that offers solid entertainment.
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Amazon.com:  6 reviews
6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
City of Illusions 19 Sep 1999
By A Customer - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
A man crawls out of the woods, naked, hungry, without knowledge, without spirit. The people who take care of him call him Falk. He is being educated, he gains knowlegde and spirit. He becomes a man of honour and truth. But who is he? After 5 years with his new family, he starts on a quest to find his true identity.

He is on Earth, in a far future. Earth that has conolized many planets, is now a barbaric world. The people of Earth are no more what they used to be. No more explorers, inventors, politicians, scientists. They became tribes, nomads and slaves.

He leanrs that he actually is a man from another world. And he IS human. He tries to find a way to win this 'battle' he is in.

This book tells of the value of truth and honour and of the importance to know yourself.

It tells a good sf story about the human race that is conquered by an alien race that used the lie as their main weapon. And this is not an sf story in which technology and space battles are the main ingredients, but everyday life, a long journey, weird lines of thought, psychological struggle and conversations that don't seem to make any sense.

I have read The Left Hand of Darkness as well, another wonderful book by Ursule LeGuin. They are on the same line of history in a far future. In both books, an individual will change the future of a whole world. In both books, honesty, honour, integrity, intelligence and courage turn out to be the way to conquer problems.

In this line of history, LeGuin has written two more books: Rocannon's World and Planet of Exile, and I can't wait to start reading them.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
The best of the Hainish novels? 30 Jan 2009
By P. Johnston - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
Why do so many science fiction lists have places for every cocktail napkin that Philip K. Dick scribbled a note on, but a real writer like Ursula K. Leguin is frequently restricted to only two novels? I suppose literary cannons, whether for academics or sci fi nerds, are as subject to fads as anything else, but in this case its really a pity. The Hainish novels are worth the effort to read, and give great insight into a Titan of Science Fiction.

"City of Illusions" is a terrific quest novel. It is a welcome reward for having read the two previous Hainish novels, and perhaps slightly better than the undeveloped metaphor of Left Hand of Darkness. By this point in her career LeGuin has mastered her trademark motif of having a man cross a world on foot. More playful, and interesting than the boring trek that pads out the last third of "Left Hand of Darkness" the walk of Falk, our hero, across a sort of apocalypse United States, is the best part of this novel which has many great features. Let me first note that LeGuin, as always with the Hainish novels, shows us a post race world which is absent in most science fiction written by male writers. Again the foundation of the book is an excellent characterization of a likable hero who always behaves in human ways, and logical, subtle world building that is only ever shown to us through the speech, and the gestures of the characters, and never in dreary, long winded exposition. The spare science fiction of "Planet of Exile" harmonizes the over abundant fantasy of "Rocannon's World" as a realistic world is peppered with talking animals, and bits of technology. The overarching element of science fiction/fantasy, however, are psychic abilities, that characters have to varying degrees.
The ending loses its way slightly...as our hero and the book switch gears from adventure, to intrigue and spy games, but still its a satisfying peice of work.
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Exploring Truth in the City of Illusions 21 Nov 1997
By eiseley@slkc.uswest.net - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
In City of Illusions, Ursula K. LeGuin shares an interesting insight about truth. In a war where lies are used as weapons, she says that the most powerful counteragent is truth. The liar will not recognize truth as such, or trust it, and will thus be suspicious of everything. To use a lie against a liar is to fight on the enemy's domainŠa great tactical advantage for the liar. Similarly, to use truth against falsehood will confuse the enemy. In either case, the side or sides using lies will inevitably become so mired in falsity that no real victory can be declared indefinitely. If the side of the liar appears to win, it will only be undermined eventually by lies from within. It is a tenuous victory at best, and very hollow and unfulfilling to keep power solely by subtle word-twisting.

How tempting it is, though, in real life, to attempt to use a lie to gain a tactical advantage. Le Guin shows the validity of maintaining integrity and refusing to lie. One slip of the tongue may not destroy an empire, but a slip of the tongue can be the stumble that can send one down the slippery slope from which there is no ascencion. City of Illusions is just thatŠa city set not on a hill, but in a gorge, attempting to hide from the light that may reveal it to be what it is, a foundation of falsity that can crumble when struck by anything unwilling to immerse itself in the lie. Is integrity a realistic idea in the real world? I believe it is the only thing that will endure. Anything less is simply attempting to build a society, or a city, or a life on a foundation of illusion.

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