:IMAGE.half | :INFO.half The Left Hand of Darkness An envoy arrives on a world with no gender. Everything he thought he understood must be relearned. | :INFO A World Without Gender Ursula K. Le Guin's 1969 Hugo and Nebula Award winner follows Genly Ai, an envoy from a loose human confederation, who travels to the planet Gethen to invite its nations to join. Gethen's people are ambisexual, periodically fertile, and without fixed gender roles. Genly's inability to process this shapes every interaction he has with the Gethenian politician Estraven, who is simultaneously his greatest ally and most incomprehensible friend. The two eventually cross a frozen glacier together, and everything changes. :JOURNEY Reading The Left Hand of Darkness 3 Alien 4 Political 4 Deepening 4 Complicated 5 Intimate 5 Aching :QUOTE [quotetype:plain, subtitle:Ursula K. Le Guin] It is good to have an end to journey toward; but it is the journey that matters, in the end. :NOTE.half Le Guin wrote the novel partly as a thought experiment: she wanted to explore how much of human behaviour is culturally determined by gender by simply removing it. She admitted later she regretted defaulting to male pronouns. | :NOTE.half The book won both the Hugo and Nebula Awards in 1970 and is widely taught in gender studies and anthropology courses alongside science fiction curricula. It was instrumental in expanding what science fiction was allowed to discuss. :LINK https://www.google.com/search?q=The+Left+Hand+of+Darkness+Ursula+K+Le+Guin+book Find a copy near you