Far Horizons : All New Tales from the Greatest Worlds of Science Fiction
, by Silverberg, Robert- ISBN: 9780380796946 | 0380796945
- Cover: Paperback
- Copyright: 4/13/2000
| Introduction | p. 1 |
| The Ekumen: Old Music and the Slave Women | p. 5 |
| The Forever War: A Separate War | p. 53 |
| The Ender Series: Investment Counselor | p. 89 |
| The Uplift Universe: Temptation | p. 119 |
| Roma Eterna: Getting to Know the Dragon | p. 175 |
| The Hyperion Cantos: Orphans of the Helix | p. 207 |
| The Sleepless: Sleeping Dogs | p. 259 |
| Tales of the Heechee: The Boy Who Would Live Forever | p. 295 |
| Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
All New Tales From The Greatest Worlds Of Science Fiction
The Ekemen
Ursula K. Le Guin
Rocannon's World (1966)Planet of Exile (1966)
City of Illusions (1967)
The Left Hand of Darkness (1969)
The Dispossessed (1974)
The Word for World is Forest 1976)
Four Ways to Forgiveness (1995)
Most of my science fiction takes place within one future-historical frame. As this developed haphazardly along with the books and stories, it contains some spectacular inconsistencies, but the general plan is this: The people of a world called Hain colonized the entire Orion Ann of the galaxy over a million years ago. All hominid species so far encountered are descendants of Hainish colonists (often genetically tailored to fit the colony planet or for other reasons).
After this Expansion, the Hainish withdrew to Hain for hundreds of millennia, leaving their far-flung offspring to hack it.
When Earth people began to explore nearby space, using Nearly As Fast As Light (NAFAL) ships and the instantaneous communicator called the ansible, they met up with the Hainish, now reaching out again to find their lost kinfolk. A League of Worlds was formed (see the novels Rocannon's World, Planet of Exile, City of Illusions). This expanded and matured into an egalitarian association of worlds and people called the Ekumen, administered from Hain by people called Stabiles, while Mobiles went out to explore unknown worlds, find out about new peoples, and serve as envoys and ambassadors to member worlds.
The "Ekumenical" novels are: The Left Hand of Darkness, The Word for World is Forest, and The Dispossessed. Most of the science-fiction stories in the collections The Wind's Twelve Quarters and The Compass Rose, the last three stories in A Fisherman of the Inland Sea, and all in Four Ways to Forgiveness, are set in the Ekumen.
This last book introduced the planets Werel and Yeowe. On Werel, thirty-five hundred years ago, an aggressive black-skinned people dominated the paler northern races and instituted a slave-based society and economy, with caste established by skin color. First contact by the Ekumen scared the xenophobic Werelians into rapid development of weapons and spaceships, and incidentally into colonizing Yeowe, the planet next inward to their sun, which they exploited with intensive slave labor. Soon after Werel finally admitted diplomats from the Ekumen, a great slave uprising began on Yeowe. After thirty years of war, Yeowe won its freedom from the dominant nation on Werel, Voe Deo. Voe Dean society was destabilized by the Yeowan liberation, as well as by the new perspectives offered by the Ekumen. Within a few years, a widespread slave uprising in Voe Deo pitted "owners" against "assets" in a full-scale civil war. This story takes place late in that war.
-Ursula K. Le GuinFar HorizonsAll New Tales From The Greatest Worlds Of Science Fiction. Copyright © by Robert Silverberg. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.
Excerpted from Far Horizons: All New Tales from the Greatest Worlds of Science Fiction by Robert A. Silverberg
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.













































