I read this because it was a 2nd volume of stories and I'd read the first for the Earthsea stories. Ever the completist!
I'm not generally a fan of short stories tend to evidence the author trying to be clever and not really succeeding in many cases. Lots of dystopian futures, flawed heroes, pointlessly tangled plotlines.
Some authors pull it off quite well, like Harry Harrison, but so many just use them as a vehicle to try and be clever. Lots of darkly open endings and ambiguous meanings. Le Guin is woefully guilty of this.
Things: Everyone thinks the World is ending, try to get to the promised land. Ambiguous, probably dark, ending.
A Trip to the Head; Confusing psychedelic nonsense.
Vaster than Empires and More Slow: Story of a bunch of 'special' people space travelling. Dark, but at least interesting and made sense.
Stars Below: Man goes potty underground. Dark ending.
The Field of Vision: People come back from seeing a miraculous vision. Go mad, Dark ending.
Direction of the Road: tedious story about a tree, dark ending.
The Ones who walk away from Omelas: Dark psychomyth on the state of humanity. Just dark really.
The Day before the Revolution: Old lady who'd begun the anarchist revolution crumbles into dark ending.
It's all just a bit dark, usually with a deliberately obscure beginning so it takes a while to work out what the heck is going on.
I get enough darkly confusing experiences with my 3 year old.
Some interesting stuff in places, but not really worth the read.