Saturday, January 27, 2018

Ursula K. Le Guin: Telling It


“Interactivity in the sense of the viewer controlling the text is also nightmarish, when interpreted to mean that the viewer can rewrite the novel.  If you don’t like the end of Moby Dick you can change it.  You can make it happy.  Ahab kills the whale.  Ooowee.


“Readers can’t kill the whale.  They can only reread until they understand why Ahab collaborated with the whale to kill himself.  Readers don’t control the text: they genuinely interact with it.”

—from “The Question I Get Asked Most Often”



“Prose does not have meter.  Prose scrupulously avoids any noticeable regularity or pattern of stresses.  If prose acquires any noticeable meter for more than a sentence or so (just as if it rhymes noticeably), it stops being prose and becomes poetry.

“This is the only difference between prose and poetry that I have ever been certain of.”

—from “Stress-Rhythm in Poetry and Prose”



"Nobody who says, 'I told you so' has ever been, or will ever be, a hero."

--Ursula K. Le Guin,
from "From Elfland to Poughkeepsie"