I've finished the third and fourth entries of the saga. In "The Farthest Shore" the magic is running out of the world; Ged and the prince of Enlad part in an adventure to find out what the problem is. It's a book full of adventure, visiting many Islands in the archipelago. In contrast, "Tehanu" has a slower pace. It's a fantasy novel in which dragons and magic are not in the foreground. It answers the question How does the dispossessed, children, women, handicapped, live in a world with magic? And doing so makes you think about the power relations in the so called real world. [@bookstodon@a.gup.pe](https://a.gup.pe/u/bookstodon) @books@kbin.social [@books@lemmy.ml](https://lemmy.ml/c/books) [\#amReading](https://comelibros.club/hashtag/347) [#books](https://comelibros.club/hashtag/1) [#fantasy](https://comelibros.club/hashtag/310) [#UrsulaKLGuin](https://comelibros.club/hashtag/348) (comment on [*The Books of Earthsea: The Complete Illustrated Edition (Earthsea Cycle)*](https://comelibros.club/book/33995), p. 600)

1
0
geras Now
1 0

Gerardo

geras@ comelibros.club

Candidato a doctor en ciencias y ayudante de profesor en la UNAM.