
--A
Moderator: I'm Murrin
While she doesn't get as much air-time, Tenar's importance to the series, and to Ged, is absolute. Good thing too! It's annoying when female authors don't have female protagonists. Why isn't Hermione the star instead of Harry? Is it because that kind of book isn't expected to sell as well? Well, if all the female writers did it, I suspect a huge, and largely untapped, market would be found. How many young girls would go nuts for books with characters who are so much like them? Irian is an awesome character too! I can only imagine how girls would react to her!Lucimay wrote:i would say tenar and ged share the series as protagonists, Fist.
How cool is that? A character-type that is, afaik, largely unexplored.Lucimay wrote:i just happened upon Tehanu for 99 cents in the goodwill bin. i wasn't really that interested in wizards and magic at the time. felt i'd been there, read that. but the writing in this book (20 years and several other books after the original first 3) is LeGuin at the top of her game AND it has an extraordinary female protagonist. a woman of age and substance.
I'm just a TAD bit jealous that you met her!!! I bought The Telling and Changing Planes a couple weeks ago. They might be my next reads, before Bakker, since they're probably quicker.Lucimay wrote:i had never read LeGuin before this book, had in fact, looked at it and NOT been interested.
incidentally...this was one of my reading marathons. i read it in a days time. and two weeks later i met LeGuin at a signing for The Telling, which was also an excellent read with a female protagonist.
Please join us:Lucimay wrote:needless to say, i am now a serious LeGuin proponant.
OH! OH! OH! Thanks for reminding me to bump the thread.Lord Foul wrote:Always love a book that focuses on something unexpected, such as training rather than battle. Lot of that in Gates of Fire.