This was a fun read, but not my favorite. Every single time I love the idea of reading Le Guin, and I love the ideas, but I just don’t vibe with her writing style. Which frustrates me, I want to like her stuff but something just doesn’t click.
This book follows Sparrowhawk as he comes of age. Sparrowhawk is a child in a village with an aptitude for magic, he eventually heads to a magic school. There he is goaded by another student into summoning the dead, an act that nearly kills him. He is left scarred and haunted by a shadow, which follows and threatens him wherever he goes. He eventually gives up on his assignment of being a village’s wizard to hunt it down. His friend from school, Vetch, joins him. They catch up to the shadow past the end of the world where Sparrowhawk merges with the shadow of his own death and emerges whole.
I feel as though there is something about the writing style, again, that I just don’t fully vibe with. Le Guin is classic fantasy and I just feel like I have a hard time following a lot of those works. Something about the way they drop important details very casually, I tend to miss them. This is a very easy read, I tore through it, but I felt like there was some barrier where I couldn’t fully connect to it.
Part of it might be that the main character and all of the influential figures are men. There’s one powerful woman who tricks Sparrowhawk twice but that’s kinda it for women. I just feel like I want a little more from my fantasy now. Having said that, in the afterword Le Guin talks about how all of the characters are people of color, something I sort of picked up on as Vetch is explicitly Black. And that’s really cool for fantasy, so frequently people of color are the savages or villains or something. So, I might overlook the lack of lady wizards.
The afterword of the book is also really interesting as it puts the book into the context of fantasy in the 60s. Back then fantasy was considered something for young kids, and with this book Le Guin wanted something that’d appeal to older folks. Teens potentially, but just something anyone could read. She also talks about how wars don’t interest her, she doesn’t want the militarism of the large fantasy works at the time. This is really a coming of age for Sparrowhawk. And I really vibe with that and I like that the scope is small, it really only has to do with one man’s journey back to himself. I just think that’s so much more powerful than large wars across worlds.
Anyways, I don’t know if I’ll continue with the series. It was short enough to read so I would not say no but I might not go out of my way to keep bashing my head against this series.