Ratings15
Average rating3.7
“A fantastical travel guide, reminiscent of Gulliver’s Travels,” from a narrator with “the eye of an anthropologist and the humor of a satirist.” —USA Today Hailed by Neil Gaiman as “a master of the craft” and Margaret Atwood as “a quintessentially American writer,” Ursula K. Le Guin is at her entertaining, thought-provoking best in this collection of ingeniously linked stories. Missing a flight, waiting in an airport, listening to garbled announcements—who doesn’t hate that misery? But Sita Dulip of Cincinnati finds a way to bypass the long lines, the crowded restrooms, the nasty food, the whimpering children and domineering parents, the bookless bookstores, the plastic chairs bolted to the floor. . . . With a kind of twist and a slipping bend, easier to do than to describe, Sita travels not to Denver but to Strupsirts, a picturesque region of waterspouts and volcanoes. Or to Djeyo, where she can stay for two nights with a balcony overlooking the amber Sea of Somue. This new method of “changing planes” enables Sita to visit bizarre societies and cultures that sometimes mirror our own . . . and sometimes open doors into the thrillingly alien. A New York Times Notable Book and Los Angeles Times bestseller, featuring illustrations by Eric Beddows, Changing Planes is your boarding pass to fifteen worlds that are vintage Le Guin, from a recipient of the PEN/Malamud Award for excellence in the art of the short story.
Reviews with the most likes.
This reminded me a lot of Invisible Cities. I enjoyed it, but not my favorite book by LeGuin I've ever read.
I'd recommend it if you are interested in fantasy world-building, where it is wonderful.
ORIGINALLY POSTED AT Fantasy Literature.
Airports are horrible places ??? the boring waits, the noisy rush, the germy stale air, the ugly utilitarian d??cor, the nasty food. That is, until Sita Dulip, while waiting for her delayed flight from Chicago to Denver and noticing that ???the airport offers nothing to any human being except access to the interval between planes,??? developed a technique to change planes inside the airport. She discovered that in the airport the traveler is uncomfortable, displaced, and already between planes and can therefore easily slip into other planes of existence while waiting for a flight.
Sita Dulip???s technique has now been publicized and travelers everywhere are using it to alleviate airport boredom. Changing Planes is a collection of fifteen of their stories. A few of the stories are mainly anthropological or linguistic explorations of imaginary cultures, but readers who are familiar with Ursula Le Guin won???t be surprised to learn that many of the stories make some sort of satirical statement about human behavior, and especially American culture. Even the short introduction manages to take a swipe at conservative politicians, authors who write bestsellers and, of course, corporations that run airlines.
Le Guin???s method of using several different worlds to highlight the problems (or potential future problems) in our own, and the social satire, make Changing Planes feel somewhat like Jonathan Swift???s Gulliver???s Travels, which I enjoyed many years ago. Almost all of the stories in Changing Planes are poignant, and some of them will stick with me for a long time. Those I liked most are:
* ???Porridge on Islac??? ??? In an attempt to genetically engineer better species of humans, animals, and plants, the Islacs are now left with a very strange society. The cover art for the first edition comes from this story.
* ???The Silence of the Asonu??? ??? Adults on Asonu don???t say much, so people from other planes think they are hiding a sacred secret. They desperately want to find out what it is.
* ???Feeling at Home with the Hennebet??? ??? The people of Hennebet have strange but charming ideas about self-identity and time perception.
* ???Social Dreaming of the Frin??? ??? In Frin, dreams are not private. Each night, the Frins dream communally.
* ???The Royals of Hegn??? ??? In Hegn, everyone has descended from royalty, except for one family. This funny social satire pokes fun at our love of celebrities.
* ???Woeful Tales from Mahigul??? ??? The four very short tales in this mini-collection were read by a traveler sitting in the beautiful outdoor library of Mahigul. I wish I could go there!
* ???Wake Island??? ??? Genetic engineering again. This frightening story is about a cohort of youngsters who were engineered to need no sleep. Scientists hoped they???d be geniuses, but it didn???t turn out quite like that.
* ???The Island of the Immortals??? ??? On this plane, diamonds are not valuable and immortality is a disease.
Each of these stories is, of course, written in Le Guin???s straightforward, unpretentious, smart and lovely style. The audiobook version is narrated by Gabrielle de Cuir, whose attractive voice perfectly fits this style. Whenever I review an audiobook, I like to pick up a print copy from my library, too, just so I can see if I???m missing anything. Sure enough, if I hadn???t looked at the print version, I would have missed the delightful black and white illustrations by Eric Beddows. I especially liked the picture of the communal dream in ???Social Dreaming of the Frin.???
Changing Planes won the 2004 Locus Award for best story collection. Many of the stories had been previously published over several years before being combined to form this themed collection, but they work beautifully together. All of them are short escapes into fascinating new planes of existence. Changing Planes would be the perfect book to read next time you???re waiting for a flight!
An eclectic but surprisingly coherent collection of “extra-planar” tales, blending unique and at times nearly incomprehensible cultures that stretch the definition of what it means to be human way beyond the typical borders. Amazing that such differences in humanity could be written by a single author and collected in a single volume. Although this is Le Guin, after all, so I suppose I should not have been too surprised.
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