There is a lifeform so strange and wondrous that it forces us to rethink how …
Beautiful and thought provoking
5 stars
I knew mushrooms are fascinating, but this book managed to fill me with awe.
Sheldrake beautifully describes how fundamental these overlooked beings are for all life on the planet.
If you have any passing interest for biology, ecology, plants or fungi, this is a must read.
Shevek, a brilliant physicist, decides to take action. He will seek answers, question the unquestionable, …
Le Guin is a fucking genius
5 stars
This book blew. My. Mind.
I'm serious, for this alone Ursula K Le Guin became my fav sci-fi author, leaps and bounds above anybody else.
She showed me what you can do with science fiction, how you can break the limits of the imagination.
It is the first time I actually managed to picture a non-hierarchical society and it is so real, so visceral, that things clicked and I realized that "wait, this is possible!?"
And she does that with a completely made up story set in two completely made up societies, both fleshed out with their greatness and infamy, their ideologies and contradictions.
It is NOT an easy read: Le Guin happily forces your brain to do some mental gymnastic, where things don't make any sense until a few pages later when they suddenly, perfectly do, things click in place and your mind is blown.
It is the book …
This book blew. My. Mind.
I'm serious, for this alone Ursula K Le Guin became my fav sci-fi author, leaps and bounds above anybody else.
She showed me what you can do with science fiction, how you can break the limits of the imagination.
It is the first time I actually managed to picture a non-hierarchical society and it is so real, so visceral, that things clicked and I realized that "wait, this is possible!?"
And she does that with a completely made up story set in two completely made up societies, both fleshed out with their greatness and infamy, their ideologies and contradictions.
It is NOT an easy read: Le Guin happily forces your brain to do some mental gymnastic, where things don't make any sense until a few pages later when they suddenly, perfectly do, things click in place and your mind is blown.
It is the book that made me understand how the limits of our current society are, first and foremost, limits of our imagination, and I don't say this lightly.
This book blows our minds, because we have been robbed of the ability to imagine a better, if imperfect, world.