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  • Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin (1973-11-08)
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Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin (1973-11-08)

Lathe of Heaven by Ursula K. Le Guin (1973-11-08)

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Top positive review

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Josh Mauthe
5.0 out of 5 starsOvertly a tribute to Philip K. Dick, but no less rich, imaginative, and thoughtful for that
Reviewed in the United States on February 23, 2018
Even before her recent passing, I've known that my lack of experience with the works of Ursula K. Le Guin was a shortcoming I needed to rectify. The only book of hers I've read was The Dispossessed, a book I admired a lot while ultimately finding a bit dry and didactic. (It's also a book I plan on revisiting soon, ideally after reading some more Le Guin and now that I know what to expect, to see if I feel differently about it.) And, as authors paid tribute to the legendary author in the wake of her passing, one novel that I saw mentioned again and again was The Lathe of Heaven, which I knew nothing about.

And, man, am I glad I checked it out. Often viewed as Le Guin's tribute to the works of Philip K. Dick, The Lathe of Heaven undeniably feels a lot like a Dick novel, with a surreal hook used to explore philosophical questions about reality and who we really are. But as you'd expect from Le Guin, there's no shortage of more social questions raised here, from the nature of peace to the dangers of global warming, all done within a great narrative that twists and turns underneath you.

The hook is simple enough: there's a man named George Orr (yes, the half allusion is probably intentional) who is scared to dream, because his dreams become real. But what makes this hard to prove is that his dreams don't just create reality; they rewrite it, making whatever he dreams not only true, but making it always have been true, so that no one remembers the change but him. That's true until George goes to court-mandated therapy, where his therapist seems to be aware of the change - and his ability to possibly control George's ability.

Like she did in The Dispossessed, Le Guin explores any number of ideas about utopias, the role of the individual in society, the question of the greater good, and her concerns about utilitarianism. At what point should the individual give way for society? Where is the cutoff between acceptable sacrifice for the greater good and too much? And what is the responsibility of one person to give it all for the world? But whereas The Dispossessed engaged with these ideas in the forms of detailed discussions, The Lathe of Heaven lets them remain more subtextual, unfolding as a battle of wills between George, his therapist, and a lawyer George brings in to help him. More than that, The Lathe of Heaven unfolds as a bizarre thriller of sorts, with reality constantly bending and shifting underneath us, and Le Guin able to explore the ramifications of so many changes, and what it would take to fix some of the problems in our world.

It all adds up to a great book, one that I really enjoyed. And if it's a bit derivative of PKD, well, that's okay, because Le Guin makes it her own, following the political and social ramifications of her conceit, not just the philosophical ones. It's a book I really enjoyed and absolutely couldn't put down, and has me eager to dive into more of an author I don't feel like I ever properly appreciated in her lifetime.
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Top critical review

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Monica Englander
2.0 out of 5 starsI know it is a great sin to criticize this book, however...
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2022
... you had to be there.
That is my total summation of what this book meant, and I'm telling you: the very delicate and deep ethos and meaning of this book does not (well, did not, for me) translate out of its time.
I remember this period of time, and the deep new concerns we had back then for themes elliptically dealt with in this book. You either got it the meaning of it all, or you were part of the establishment, which the young people were trying to not duplicate.
We were trying to save ourselves, save the planet, save the world.
And the "dark forces" (mostly greed, but whatever else goes with that -- lust for power, for sure) were at work, as they always have been.
So this work is delicate. She was an amazing author taking on very deep and important topics. I just could not get into it.
When I was 14, I would have been transfixed by every page.
I see this a lot, actually ---- books that were so very cutting edge and truly important in their time, and now, they just don't translate. It's not that the problems and themes aren't still needing solutions -- it's that we, as humans, have changed, and our language and manner perspective have changed.
I can't explain it any better, I regret.
Anyway, I hope you like it. I did not.
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5 people found this helpful

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From the United States

K. Springs
2.0 out of 5 stars Alternate Reality Confusion
Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2018
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This review was first published on Kurt's Frontier.

Synopsis:

George Orr lives in a world beset by climate instability and overpopulation. However, his dreams have power over reality. When he awakens from vivid dreams, he finds that the world has become strange. It does not fit the clear memory of the world before he slept. Terrified of this power, he seeks the help of psychiatrist Dr. William Haber. Dr. Haber realizes what a powerful tool this could be for good. George becomes a pawn in Dr. Haber’s playing God. With each dream, humanity grows more imperiled.

Review:

This is the first novel I’ve read by the late Ursula K. Le Guin. The concept itself is interesting. What if a person found he had the power to change reality? Could this person manage all the variables that go into changing reality? This is a fascinating element of this novel. As Dr. Haber manipulates George Orr’s gift to change the world for the better, new problems seem to replace the old ones.

My problem with the book is that it becomes confusing. This is a danger for books that deal with alternate reality stories, such as time travel. As the world changes, so do the settings, antagonists, and goals. Being an action/adventure type, this may not have been the Ursula Le Guin story to cut my teeth on.
3 people found this helpful
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Monica Englander
2.0 out of 5 stars I know it is a great sin to criticize this book, however...
Reviewed in the United States on January 18, 2022
Verified Purchase
... you had to be there.
That is my total summation of what this book meant, and I'm telling you: the very delicate and deep ethos and meaning of this book does not (well, did not, for me) translate out of its time.
I remember this period of time, and the deep new concerns we had back then for themes elliptically dealt with in this book. You either got it the meaning of it all, or you were part of the establishment, which the young people were trying to not duplicate.
We were trying to save ourselves, save the planet, save the world.
And the "dark forces" (mostly greed, but whatever else goes with that -- lust for power, for sure) were at work, as they always have been.
So this work is delicate. She was an amazing author taking on very deep and important topics. I just could not get into it.
When I was 14, I would have been transfixed by every page.
I see this a lot, actually ---- books that were so very cutting edge and truly important in their time, and now, they just don't translate. It's not that the problems and themes aren't still needing solutions -- it's that we, as humans, have changed, and our language and manner perspective have changed.
I can't explain it any better, I regret.
Anyway, I hope you like it. I did not.
5 people found this helpful
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quietcatly
2.0 out of 5 stars Interesting but repetitive
Reviewed in the United States on February 18, 2019
Verified Purchase
Although I found the idea of having the protagonist's dreams turn retroactively into reality, I think the author missed an opportunity to fully explore the idea. There is too much repetition of whether we have the right to change the world even if it is for the better, but perhaps not enough of possible world order scenarios in each case. There is just a mention of wars involving Afganistan, Pakistan etc. I think this book would of been a master piece if it delved into different scenarios of world politics, instead of a repetitive life of a colorless protagonist in Portland.
4 people found this helpful
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John B. Biggs
2.0 out of 5 stars LeGuin surprisingly does not cut it this tine
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2019
Verified Purchase
I am basically a fan of LeGuin. She creates plausible worlds (give or take), very well and grippingly written, and there's an important philosophical point there. This plot is no way plausible. A man's dreams become objectively for other people. Billions die because he dreams it. A mountain disappears. He feels very guilty, goes to a shrink who is out of his depth. But it can't work because it is internally inconsistent wheres good sci fi is consistent within its own parameters. Most reviews of this book are 4 star at least, which is par for the course for LeGuin. But not for me this time.
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Kindle Customer
2.0 out of 5 stars Quite a let down
Reviewed in the United States on November 12, 2019
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I loved Ursula Le Guins left hand of darkness.in that book she pushed boundaries and questions assumptions around gender. Her attempt to write about race is awkward at best but at it's worse is a terrible caricature of specific characters. It reveals she doesn't understand the root causes of racism. Don't waste your time on this book.
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Alex
2.0 out of 5 stars The beginning is amazing, the ending is awful
Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2021
Verified Purchase
I read the first 50 pages and was enthralled, then I read the rest and wish I hadn't. The only reason that this review has two starts is due to the beginning, I don't understand how such a talented author can write such a terrible book. The ending doesn't make sense, feels confused, and is boring.
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Michael A. Pennington
2.0 out of 5 stars over rated
Reviewed in the United States on May 5, 2018
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Review the book was ok, it love the idea of itself more then anything. to me the fear of a world that changes with every possible dream is a interesting twist but the overall plot was bland drawn out boring. the ending felt cheap, indifferent and a cop out, when it does end an wraps itself up it felt boring.

spoiler beyond about why i disliked it

so he goes to therapy seeking help from a doc, the doc find out truth he can alter reality use him to make a better world and patient feel he wrong. why? because we should not play god? even Thu the whole world broken and near death he feel we should do nothing.... even thu near end of book he recalls a memory were the world was worse an he was near death and use it too save himself even if he did it subconscious....

from their he let the doc keep making the machine that will give him the power over dreams and near end somehow the patient " learns " by half speech with a alien how to control dreams, aspects the doc gaining the power an let him do it but doc despite knowing an researching about dreams an working with him this whole time only make a nightmare broken world and is save by the patient, who then make a world that a mix of worlds up to this point. doc brain is fried for some reason and patient live happily ever after with a women he wanted after meeting once in book.

for me i rather seen a perfect world that you wonder what is real because of doc controlling reality playing god or the patient excepting his death an it all go bleak and dark because he felt no man should play god even if the world is worse. instead we get a semi better then at start of the book world that neither really better or worse world an he live in a odd " better " the nothing world.
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Christie Minaya
2.0 out of 5 stars Disappointing
Reviewed in the United States on November 13, 2020
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At first it started like a promising sci-fi story, but as the pages went by I found myself bored with the way the plot was developing. Wouldn't recommend if you are a sci-fi beginner like me.
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Carla Glasper
2.0 out of 5 stars Confusing
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2015
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I found this book quite confusing and strange. Not a very interesting read and rather disappointing. Tried to just skip through but there was nothing to grab on to.
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Lee Rhys
2.0 out of 5 stars gonna have to read this again
Reviewed in the United States on May 19, 2014
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Great premise. Unusually opaque for this author; the middle third is rushed and muddled. I will read it again and see if I missed something.
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