@booklet {5307, title = {"Social Dreaming of the Frin"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction }, volume = {103.4 \& 5 (611) }, year = {2002}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ Changing Planes\ (Orlando, FL: Harcourt, 2003), 76-88. U.K. ed. (London: Gollancz, 2004), 65-75.

}, month = {October/November 2002}, pages = {178-86}, abstract = {

A short story with both eutopian and dystopian elements describing a world in which everyone experiences the dreams of other people and of animals (animals are not used for food). This creates a \“communion of all sentient creatures\” (U.S. ed. 88) but also involves a radical questioning of the self.\ 

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X}, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)} } @booklet {4546, title = {"Solitude"}, howpublished = {The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction}, volume = { 87.6 }, year = {1994}, note = {

Rpt. in The Best from Fantasy \& Science Fiction: The Fiftieth Anniversary Anthology. Ed. Edward L. Ferman and George Van Gelder (New York: Tor, 1999), 353-81;\ in her The Birthday of the World and Other Stories (New York: HarperCollins, 2002), 119-51; U.K. ed. (London: Gollancz, 2002), 119-51; in Diverse Energies. Ed. Tobias S. Buckell and Joe Monti (New York: Tu Books, 2012), 267-305; in her The Real and the Unreal. Selected Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin. Volume Two Outer Space, Inner Lands (Easthampton, MA: Small Beer Press, 2012), 175-203; in the one volume edition The Real and the Unreal: The Selected Short Stories of Ursula K. Le Guin (New York: Saga Press, 2016), 519-50;\ and in Hainish Novels \& Stories Volume Two. The World for Word Is Forest Stories Five Ways to Forgiveness The Telling. Ed. Brian Attebery (New York: Library of America, 2017), 290-318 with a \“Note on the Text\” (781) and \“Notes (786).

}, month = {December 1994}, pages = {132-59}, abstract = {

Complex society in which men and women live separately. The men mostly live near the women\&$\#$39;s villages, where the women live in individual huts with extremely limited interaction, the children providing the chief means of contact. Gangs of boys and individual rogue males are dangerous to both the other men and the women, but most of the men live peacefully. Whether eutopian or not is likely to produce considerable debate. Some consider it a feminist eutopia and the point-of-view character presents the women\&$\#$39;s society as a good one.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, issn = {00024-984X }, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)} } @booklet {3003, title = {"SQ"}, howpublished = {Cassandra Rising}, year = {1978}, note = {

Rpt. in her\ The Compass Rose\ (New York: Harper \& Row, 1982), 69-80.

}, month = {1978}, pages = {1-10}, publisher = {Doubleday}, address = {Garden City, NY}, abstract = {

Dystopia. The SQ test is presumably able to distinguish the sane and the insane and becomes required world-wide. Gradually the majority of people are judged insane and most of the sane choose to live in the asylums both to care for their relatives and because life was better in them than outside where the world economy is collapsing.

}, keywords = {Female author, US author}, author = {Ursula K[roeber] Le Guin (1929-2018)}, editor = {Alice Laurence} }