Science fiction and fantasy fans were shocked Tuesday when it was announced that Ursula K. Le Guin, the iconic author of science fiction and fantasy works like The Left Hand of Darkness, had passed away at 88 years old. Authors, artists, and filmmakers alike flocked to Twitter to share memories of the acclaimed writer who helped shape modern speculative fiction. We’ve collected some of their words here, and invite you to share yours as well.
Notable Tributes:
Neil Gaiman: Author, The Sandman, American Gods, etc.
Charlie Jane Anders: Author, All The Birds In The Sky | co-founder io9
“I still don’t have any words about Ursula K Le Guin. Her writing meant everything to me.”
Stephen King: Author, basically everything
“Usula [sic] K. LeGuin, one of the greats, has passed. Not just a science fiction writer; a literary icon. Godspeed into the galaxy.”
Annalee Newitz: Author, Autonomous | co-founder io9
“Ursula LeGuin was my first science fiction inspiration as a kid and she continued to inspire me throughout my adult life. Her stories are permanently installed in my mind.”
Tiffany Trent: Author, The Unnaturalists
Daniel José Older: Author, Shadowshaper, Half-Resurrection Blues
“Omg...RIP to the hero Ursula Kroeber Le Guin, a tremendous human being and storyteller who helped make fantasy a more imaginative and humane genre. This is a huge loss. Damn that’s sad. Told the guy selling tickets at the cinema that Ursula Le Guin died and he went ‘I don’t know who that is uh are you okay?’ I think I had a lot of emotions happening on my face at that moment.”
Hiromi Goto: Author, Chorus of Mushrooms, Half World
“A small eddy of wind began swirling on the coast. Growing, breathing with stories, political passion, feminist power & bright spirit, the wind circled the Earth, once, twice, thrice, then flew out to the stars. Thank you, Ursula K. Le Guin. From my heart.”
Praise For Iconic Works:
Jess Fink: Comics Artist, Chester 5000, We Can Fix It
John Rogers: Screenwriter, The Librarians, Catwoman, Transformers (story)
“The Left Hand of Darkness was the first novel—and I can summon up the sensation, even now, in recollection—that when I finished it, it felt like someone was physically pressing a hand, firmly, against my chest. Stop. Feel. *Think*. RIP ma’am.”
Manu Saadia: Author, Trekonomics
“If you want to understand Star Trek’s brand of sci-fi utopia, you must read Ursula K. LeGuin—and specifically her masterpiece The Dispossessed. She was one of the few sci-fi authors who carried the torch of utopia.”
Myke Cole: Author, The Armored Saint, The Empty Throne series
“My favorite Ursula K. Le Guin quote still calms my heart, even all these years after I first read it in A Wizard of Earthsea:
‘Go on and do your work. Do it well. It is all you can do.’”
How She Shaped Science Fiction:
Liz Garbus: Filmmaker, Bobby Fischer Against the World
N.K. Jemisin: Author, The Obelisk Gate, The Fifth Season, etc.
“This is heartbreaking. I always hoped for the chance to meet her. She’s one of the reasons I’m a writer now. She sent me a polite thanks a few months back, via our agents, for my (squeeful in a dignified way) NYT review of her short story collection. I did a total fangirl squee, bouncing around my little apartment. ::sigh:: And altho I didn’t realize it at the time, folks pointed out to me that the Broken Earth saga is basically ‘The Ones Who Walk Away From Omelas’ writ large. Her influence is all of my work, popping out in ways I don’t even notice ‘til much later.”
Richard Kadrey: Author, Sandman Slim series, Metrophage
“Not to harsh anyone’s science fiction mellow, but I always considered Ursula Le Guin to be the cure for Heinlein. For many of us, she blew the doors off the boys club.”
Catherynne Valente: Author, Fairyland series, Radiance
“One of the many, many things Le Guin gave us was a subtle one: that the ‘science’ in science fiction could also be the social sciences, and that, indeed, without it, no science fiction could be entirely complete.”
Ursula Vernon: Author, Digger, The Seventh Bride
“All I can think of to say about Le Guin’s passing is that the world broke its teeth on her, not the other way around. May we all live to be as old and fierce and beautiful as she was.”