Always Coming Home

Always Coming Home is a novel by Ursula K. Le Guin published in 1985. This novel is about a race of humans who "might be going to have lived a long, long time from now in Northern California." (p. i) Part novel, part textbook, part anthropologist's record, Always Coming Home explains the life and culture of the futuristic race called the Kesh, anarchistic, introspective and religious. The book's composition weaves around the story of a Kesh woman called Stone Telling, who lived for a while with the people of her father - the Dayao or the Condor people, whose society is rigid, hierarchical and expansionist. The story fills less than a third of the book's total volume, though; the rest is a mixture of Kesh cultural lore (including poetry, literature, mythos, rituals), essays on Kesh culture, and the author's own musings under the pseudonym "Pandora". The book is accompanied by a tape of Kesh music and poetry (often not found with the used copies of the book, but available on order from the publisher). Unlike most books based on a future earth, Always Coming Home follows Native American and Taoist themes. Songs in the book were composed by Todd Barton and pictures in the novel were drawn by Margaret Chodos-Irvine.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
naomie harris
henry brand
united unionist coalition
skyros
william henry barlow
arthur wellesley peel, 1st viscount peel
audio filter
harlesden station
stonebridge park station
tantulocarida
wembley central station
north wembley station
ulster democratic party
south kenton station
new zealand elections
wish you were here (song)
kenton station
ulster loyalist democratic party
harrow & wealdstone station
ll
love fist
civil defence centre
civil defence centres in london
reading school
george oppen
sitel corporation
randall simon
stockholm county council
jedem das seine
tales from earthsea
serbian presidential election
lichtenfels (district)
der junge trless
softbank corp
emma willard
fair oaks
nori (middle earth)
thames river
dori (middle earth)
willem einthoven
thames river (connecticut)
royal oak
werner forssmann
strib