Changing planes

[stories]

No cover

Changing planes (2004, Harcourt, Inc.)

246 pages

English language

Published 2004 by Harcourt, Inc..

ISBN:
978-0-15-100971-8
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5 stars (2 reviews)

14 editions

Lighter, but still a lot to think about

4 stars

Lighter than most Le Guin I’ve read, Changing Planes is a Gulliver’s Travels for the present era, the social satire made possible through interdimensional travel. (When you’re stuck in a dismal airport between planes, well, you’re already between planes, right?)

Some chapters are told first person as the narrator explores a new reality (sometimes sticking to the tourist spots, sometimes going off the beaten path). Others read more like magazine articles or encyclopedia entries. Still others mix first- and second-hand accounts with the narrator’s reactions to them.

There’s a lot of whimsy, humor and sarcasm. It’s not particularly deep (especially compared to her major works), but it does give you a lot to think about.

(Cross-posted from my website.)