Monique's Reviews > A Wizard of Earthsea
A Wizard of Earthsea (Earthsea Cycle, #1)
by Ursula K. Le Guin
Original post here.
What's in a name?
Apparently, a lot. Everything, perhaps, when you get to read Ursula K. Le Guin's high fantasy classic, A Wizard of Earthsea. An enemy knowing your true name can mean the end of you, and so practically everything – living or non-living – go by another public name. Aliases, yes?
Sparrowhawk – or Ged, his true name – is a young wizard from the goatherding town of Gont whose budding powers were harnessed and polished in a wizarding school in Roke, in the Isles of the Wise. Once upon a time, when he was a small boy, he helped drive off the Kargad invaders with what little power he knew he had and some witchery he had recently learned from a witch aunt. Thus, he caught the attention of Ogion, an old wizard, who eventually sent him to Roke to learn what he can about their arts. However, prior to his journey by sea to Roke, Ged inadvertently unleashes a dark creature that will turn out to be his nemesis.
There are some who say that Harry Potter's character is patterned from Ged's, what with their many similarities (what they are, I will no longer elaborate). While admittedly, these similarities were there, and are indeed too numerous to be mere coincidences, it didn't affect me all that much. Perhaps because I've read the Harry Potter series years back (and liked it), and the comparison to A Wizard of Earthsea seems too inconsequential to dwell on at this time. (And hey, it isn't a bad thing to be inspired by older, more successful works, is it?)
I truly enjoyed this book. I am no hardcore high fantasy reader, but when I do pick books to read from this genre from time to time, I find myself immensely entertained and quite immersed in them. One thing I particularly liked about A Wizard of Earthsea is that it was fast-paced storytelling: the story began when Ged was all but a young goatherd and went by his childhood name “Duny,” and ended when he was a full-fledged 19-year-old powerful wizard. In all of 182 pages of my bargain mass-market paperback copy (I couldn't find a trade paperback), Ged's various adventures through the many islands of Earthsea had been tightly packed: dragons, sorcerers, magic, shadows, evil, Old Powers. You could argue that I'm too old for those, but I won't let you win. :P
A Wizard of Earthsea is a quick, easy read, but as a fellow book blogger and book club friend put it, it might be short, but the fantasy adventure was complete. I couldn't have said it better.
by Ursula K. Le Guin
Monique's review
bookshelves: 2012, classics, children-s, fantasy, series-books
Jul 12, 12
bookshelves: 2012, classics, children-s, fantasy, series-books
Read from July 08 to 12, 2012 — I own a copy
Original post here.
What's in a name?
Apparently, a lot. Everything, perhaps, when you get to read Ursula K. Le Guin's high fantasy classic, A Wizard of Earthsea. An enemy knowing your true name can mean the end of you, and so practically everything – living or non-living – go by another public name. Aliases, yes?
Sparrowhawk – or Ged, his true name – is a young wizard from the goatherding town of Gont whose budding powers were harnessed and polished in a wizarding school in Roke, in the Isles of the Wise. Once upon a time, when he was a small boy, he helped drive off the Kargad invaders with what little power he knew he had and some witchery he had recently learned from a witch aunt. Thus, he caught the attention of Ogion, an old wizard, who eventually sent him to Roke to learn what he can about their arts. However, prior to his journey by sea to Roke, Ged inadvertently unleashes a dark creature that will turn out to be his nemesis.
There are some who say that Harry Potter's character is patterned from Ged's, what with their many similarities (what they are, I will no longer elaborate). While admittedly, these similarities were there, and are indeed too numerous to be mere coincidences, it didn't affect me all that much. Perhaps because I've read the Harry Potter series years back (and liked it), and the comparison to A Wizard of Earthsea seems too inconsequential to dwell on at this time. (And hey, it isn't a bad thing to be inspired by older, more successful works, is it?)
I truly enjoyed this book. I am no hardcore high fantasy reader, but when I do pick books to read from this genre from time to time, I find myself immensely entertained and quite immersed in them. One thing I particularly liked about A Wizard of Earthsea is that it was fast-paced storytelling: the story began when Ged was all but a young goatherd and went by his childhood name “Duny,” and ended when he was a full-fledged 19-year-old powerful wizard. In all of 182 pages of my bargain mass-market paperback copy (I couldn't find a trade paperback), Ged's various adventures through the many islands of Earthsea had been tightly packed: dragons, sorcerers, magic, shadows, evil, Old Powers. You could argue that I'm too old for those, but I won't let you win. :P
A Wizard of Earthsea is a quick, easy read, but as a fellow book blogger and book club friend put it, it might be short, but the fantasy adventure was complete. I couldn't have said it better.
Sign into Goodreads to see if any of your friends have read A Wizard of Earthsea.
sign in »
Reading Progress
| 07/08/2012 | page 19 |
|
10.0% | "To hear, one must be silent." |
| 07/10/2012 | page 72 |
|
40.0% | "Is that you, Harry? :P" |
| 07/11/2012 | page 96 |
|
53.0% | "Even foolery is dangerous in the hands of a fool." 2 comments |
Comments (showing 1-4 of 4) (4 new)
date
newest »
newest »
message 1:
by
Rollie
(new)
-
rated it 4 stars
Feb 15, 2012 10:29pm
Haha. Currently reading ko to. :D
reply
|
flag
*
I don't have a copy yet, Rollie. But I've read about this book before; it's only now I remembered about LeGuin. :)

