tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7670543499274741427.post8283511366462448806..comments2024-03-26T17:54:54.592+01:00Comments on Speculiction...: Review of "The Farthest Shore" by Ursula Le GuinUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7670543499274741427.post-22888790444159198482012-09-13T08:55:42.677+02:002012-09-13T08:55:42.677+02:00And thank you for visiting my blog and commenting!...And thank you for visiting my blog and commenting! Yes, there are three additional books, pushing the Earthsea Cycle to six total. Be warned, the final three are an abrupt change from the original trilogy. Instead of personal development, Le Guin shifts toward overt feminist material, as well as the development of family and society. While I personally find the latter books insightful, others have been more ambivalent in their opinion. If you care, I will be publishing reviews of those books in the near future.<br /><br />Regarding your last statement, without a doubt one of the reasons the Earthsea Cycle is so great is that it can be enjoyed by the young and appreciated by the old--or at least, older. :)Jessehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07796098208589965362noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7670543499274741427.post-24892152180778710602012-09-12T22:11:41.027+02:002012-09-12T22:11:41.027+02:00Thanks for your interesting thoughts on the Earths...Thanks for your interesting thoughts on the Earthsea Cycle. I always though that I'd read the whole cycle, but apparently there are other books in the cycle (it's not just a trilogy). I'll have to reread from the beginning because it's been so long that I hardly remember the first three! Your posts made me more interested in reading them. The first time I read them I was too young to understand any deeper philosophical meaning.Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01974988315420539840noreply@blogger.com