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A Wizard of Earthsea: One of the Best Fantasy Novels of All Time

If you think “fantasy,” what novels pop up in your mind? J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings? C.S. Lewis’s The Chronicles of Narnia? Or more recent works like J.K. Rowling’s Harry Potter series and Game of Thrones by George R.R. Martin? These authors are definitely the big names of fantasy with their masterpieces made into widely successful film/TV adaptations.

Dragons, the quintessential element of fantasy. Photo by Sean Thomas.

But have you heard of Ursula K. Le Guin’s Earthsea novels?

If you haven’t, you’re missing out on the most magical, critically-acclaimed fantasy series of all time that’s criminally overlooked by the mass. Allow me to introduce you to Le Guin’s A Wizard of Earthsea.

A Wizard of Earthsea: Tale of Wisdom

This photo would make the perfect movie poster for A Wizard of Earthsea.
Photo by Trevor McKinnon.

A Wizard of Earthsea is the first novel of The Earthsea Cycle, a series of six novels written by Ursula K. Le Guin. Published back in 1968, the book narrates the story of a great wizard named Sparrowhawk, before he became dragonlord and Archmage of all of Earthsea. Le Guin explains in the afterword of the 2012 edition (published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) that she got the idea for the book after imagining what it would have been like for wizards such as Merlin and Gandalf to learn to be wizards. And A Wizard of Earthsea is just that: how Sparrowhawk, aka Ged, came to be a great wizard, of when he was young and yet a “fool kid.”

The 2012 edition of A Wizard of Earthsea published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.
It includes the author’s afterword.

One gets to see the main character, Sparrowhawk/Ged, grow from a young, impatient boy from the island of Gont to a wise, thoughtful wizard after unleashing an evil shadow onto the world while meddling with ancient spells at the School for Wizards. Running away from the dark unnamed being that hunts him, he learns from his mistake and pride, eventually setting forth to face the evil to do what must be done. It’s a magical tale of growth filled with nuggets of wisdom that only come from someone who’s lived long enough to know the ways of the world or insightful enough to understand one or two things about how life works.

It’s not flashy or action-packed, although there are enough adventures throughout. Unlike many of today’s wild, fast-paced novels, A Wizard of Earthsea is a calm, peaceful journey of a reading with irresistible charm and intrigue. And while novels popular with the masses these days are like cheap fast-food with little nutritional value, Le Guin’s A Wizard of Earthsea is like a healthy, well-cooked meal to enjoy with ample amount of time.

A Wizard of Earthsea will take you on a mesmerizing journey across the isles and seas of Earthsea. Photo by François Genon.

The World of Earthsea

Another beauty of Le Guin‘s A Wizard of Earthsea is the incredible worldbuilding. As you follow the protagonist, Ged, on his voyages to the different isles of Earthsea, the world genuinely feels more than some fictional creation. Le Guin crafted the world so well with her descriptions and explanations that Earthsea feels like it’s part of the world we live in, tucked away in some part of the world not well known yet.

The world of Earthsea drawn by the author herself. From the 2012 edition.

As opposed to some other fantasy novels I’ve read lately (*cough* Lightlark *cough.* To see what I mean, check out my Lightlark posts HERE.) the world of Earthsea makes sense. It make so much sense that I buy into the world Le Guin created, so much to the point that it feels like a real world I haven’t explored yet. Her descriptions of the isles and the seas, the people of the different parts of Earthsea don’t confuse me, despite the presence of magic, wizards, and dragons. And not only is her worldbuilding easy to understand, consistent and unique, but it’s also deep.

Here’s what I mean:

True Names of Things

In the world of Earthsea, there is the Old Speech and New Speech, much like how there are Old and modern English. (And like how all languages today have their ancient and modern counterparts.) For wizards to use magic, they must use the true names of things in the Old Speech. As Le Guin explains on page 54, “magic consists in this, the true naming of a thing.”

Here’s how the Master Namer, Kurremkarmerruk, of the School for Wizards explains the principle:

"But magic, true magic, is worked only by those beings who speak the Hardic tongue of Earthsea, or the Old Speech from which it grew. That is the language dragons speak, and the language Segoy spoke who made the islands of the world, and the language of our lays and songs, spells, enchantments, and invocations. Its words lie hidden and changed among our Hardic words."
- From A Wizard of Earthsea by Ursula K. Le Guin. Page 54-55.
Photo by Cristian Escobar.

Real Names

In accordance to this principle of true names, the people of Earthsea have “real names” that they cannot share with anyone but close friends and families they trust:

"No one knows a man's true name but himself and his namer. He may choose at length to tell it to his brother, or his wife, or his friend, yet even those few will never use it where any third person may hear it. In front of other people they will, like other people, call him by his use-name, his nickname... Who knows a man's name, holds that man's life in his keeping." 
- Le Guin 81-82. 
Photo by Clément Falize.

Danger of Shapeshifting

Just listen to this excellent explanation as to why shapeshifting is extremely dangerous to wizards:

"As a boy, Ogion like all boys had thought it would be a very pleasant game to take by art-magic whatever shape one liked, man or beast, tree or cloud, and so to play at a thousand beings. But as a wizard he had learned the price of the game, which is the peril of losing one's self, playing away the truth. The longer a man stays in a form not his own, the greater this peril."
- Le Guin 147-148. 
Photo by Igor Rodrigues.

These ideas, including the power of names, the true names of different things and people, and the danger of shapeshifting, make such great sense and are kept consistent throughout the entire novel that with the map, Earthsea feels as real as clusters of unexplored islands in the middle of the Pacific:

Photo of map of Earthsea from the 1984 edition of A Wizard of Earthsea published by Bantam.

Conclusion

A Wizard of Earthsea has all the elements of true fantasy: magic, dragons and quests that span across seas. It’s a treat to follow Ged on his journeys from one isle to another, using the map illustrated and provided by the author herself. But unlike your conventional fantasy books, Earthsea shows paths a young boy takes to become the great wizard that he later becomes. Through his grave mistake and subsequent trials, Ged learns to face his fears, ultimately overcoming them to become whole as he masters the darkness within.

🧙‍♂️🦅🌠

A Wizard of Earthsea exudes much wisdom about life, offers plenty of suspense from the existence of “the shadow,” and bewitches readers with flawless, deep worldbuilding. It is a masterfully written book that deserves its spot right beside the biggest titles of fantasy literature.

It’s one of the best fantasy novels of all time.

Photo by Wenhao Ryan.

P.S. The next Earthsea novel is called The Tombs of Atuan. It even won a Newbery Award in 1972!

The Tombs of Atuan with copies of A Wizard of Earthsea.
Photo of the back cover of A Wizard of Earthsea (2012).

I can’t wait to read all the sequels. I have a feeling that they’re all going to be stellar like A Wizard of Earthsea.

P.P.S. Learn more about the incredible mind behind Earthsea, author Ursula K. Le Guin, by visiting her official website HERE.


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Lightlark Overlays (Official Preorder Gift) + Final Commentary

It’s finally here! I received my preorder gift from Abrams Books: the six custom page overlays of characters from Alex Aster’s Lightlark:

The six overlays! Illustrated by the talented @kalisamiii

The overlays came with this card with the following message from the author:

Which has illustrations of the six rulers on the back, along with the prophecy from Lightlark:

Lightlark Overlays

I had to wait a few more weeks after receiving the book on August 24th for these overlays. Though I wished it had shipped with my preordered book, now I’m just happy to have gotten them! Here they are placed inside Lightlark. Aren’t they just stunning?

🥀 Isla Crown, the main protagonist of Lightlark.
Ruler of Wildling.
🌌 Grimshaw, aka ruler of Nightshade.
1 of the 2 love interests of Isla Crown.
☁ King Azul of Skyling.
☀ King Oro aka the Sunling ruler who is also the King of Lightlark. The other love interest of Isla Crown.
🌙 Cleo, the ruler of Moonling, who hates Isla Crown.
🌟 Celeste, ruler of Starlings and Isla’s best friend.

Kalisami did such a great job depicting each of the Lightlark rulers! They look just as they’re supposed to look, based on the descriptions from the book. And I love how she added in the different elements behind each ruler to show what powers they have.

Final Comments on Alex Aster’s Lightlark

Photo by Annie Spratt.

As someone who actually preordered Lightlark and read it, I can say that I enjoyed reading the book. Though it wasn’t the best YA fantasy I’ve ever read or the best piece of fiction, I liked reading about the different realms, albeit some confusing parts that I still don’t fully get.

I especially enjoyed reading the plot twist. I knew something was coming but I certainly did not expect it to have unfolded the way it did. The last 100 pages or so were stunning!

However, I do think that the book was marketed with misleading information. Though it didn’t affect me much as I didn’t buy the book hoping it to be like The Hunger Games or A Court of Thorns and Roses, I can see why many people were/are upset. As someone who followed Alex Aster on Instagram for months, I did notice that some of the parts or quotes that were advertised for Lightlark weren’t in the novel.

Aside from the false advertisement and some editorial mistakes, Lightlark can be a great introductory novel for readers who haven’t read YA fantasy. Something readers can read before jumping into the world of YA fantasy.

Anyways, I’m happy to have read it, to have attended the wonderful Moonling event in San Francisco and to have these overlays to keep:

What are your thoughts on Lightlark?


P.S. To read about the Moonling event I attended in San Francisco, click HERE.

P.P.S. For the other preorder gift from Abrams Books (i.e. the sneak peek), check out the post HERE.