A few years ago, after reading everything in the Hainish Cycle, I decided I’d try and get the whole thing in print. I’m not a serious collector, not necessarily after first editions or otherwise rare editions; but I did want hard covers, and I wanted editions that had dust jackets with all that funky scifi art of the 60’s/70’s/80’s. So far the Hainish books have been good to me in the sense that none of it has been really rare and it’s mostly under the 100 usd/eur point as long as you’re not looking for signed stuff.
Unfortunately it gets a little weird with The Word for World Is Forest: The only good looking hard cover happens to be on one of the earlier editions and while I doubt it’s truly rare, it’s rare enough people start asking a lot for it. I finally got lucky and some kind bookshop on ebay put it up for less than 100, dust jacket and all, and I finally get to add it to the shelf.
It’s not my favorite of the Hainish Cycle, but it’s an easy recommend (I recommend everything and anything from Le Guin). I know it’s a favorite for a lot of folks. Anyways, if you’re just getting into collecting print scifi, bookfinder.com is fantastic for what it is (aggregator for the inventories of the big used book operations), and I guess every once in a while ebay can work out.
Nice. Congrats! Not my favorite, either, but still a damn good read.
I have a feeling it would have ranked higher for me if I’d read it when I was younger. It’s not a maturity thing or quality of writing, but at some point it got harder for me to digest stories that have heavy doses of cruelty. I was really waiting for some kind of resolution very early into it.
An absolute classic of the Hainish cycle. I love the smaller shorter more… lore breaking ones. They can get extremely weird.
I just finished reading The Eye of the Heron for the first time. To me it had a very similar feel, and in the back of my head I was thinking how you could totally headcanon your way into saying this could be another tale from Earth’s first (mis)steps into the cosmos and Hainish universe.
Always much love for Ursula K. Le Guin. The Dispossessed is a masterpiece.