Sebastian
April 17, 2026

Creative Column

I’ve been reading the book ‘The Language of the Night’ – a collection of essays by superstar writer Ursula K. Le Guin. Ursula K. Le Guin was perhaps one of the most influential, successful and prolific authors of the 20th century. She was not boxed in by any category finding acclaim in a wide range of genres and formats. She is known for her epic fantasy series ‘The Wizard of Earthsea’ and reflective science fiction pieces in her ‘Hainish Cycle’ series. She has won the Hugo Award, Nebula Award and National Book Prize.  

In her witty sardonic collection of essays, Le Guin defends science fiction and fantasy as important and worthy means of literature – a direct response to the elitist critics of the time who condemned speculative fiction as merely for kids.  

One thing I really enjoyed was learning about her process. She talks about writing fiction as a process of discovery rather than planning. In some of her most acclaimed novels she never used a plan or scaffold – she just simply started writing. I love thinking of writing and creativity as a process of discovery. It’s as if our creation is actually a search for something deep inside of us that we previously were not aware of.  

She’s a great author who I would absolutely recommend to just about anyone. I am also reading her science fiction masterpiece – ‘The Left Hand of Darkness’. Definitely a brilliant piece of philosophical and existential ponderance.