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“This delightful book [is] inquisitive and stroppily opinionated in equal measure… In even these miscellanies, composed in [Le Guin’s] off hours, the sentences are perfectly balanced and the language chosen with care. After all, she writes, ‘Words are my matter—my stuff.’ And it’s through their infinite arrangements… that Ms. Le Guin’s extraordinary imaginary worlds have been built and shared.”

Wall Street Journal

“‘No Time to Spare,’ deriving from Le Guin’s online essays, covers just about anything that crosses her mind, from “lit biz” to cats to the Oregon landscape… Might there be truth to the commonplace that science fiction writers are prophets? … A year ago I argued that Le Guin deserved a Nobel Prize in literature. In fact—what a fantasy!—she ought to be running the country.”

The Washington Post

“In “No Time to Spare: Thinking About What Matters,” Le Guin shows that elders have plenty to teach… [She] finds inspiration in the everyday and makes it sparkle with her prose… In step with her legacy, [she] challenges us to reconsider what we automatically accept… “No Time to Spare” will leave readers hoping that Le Guin is given a bit more time to share her observations—on aging, art, our world—and to remind us of things we mustn’t forget.”

Newsday

“Le Guin’s new book, No Time To Spare… feels like the surprising and satisfying culmination to a career in other literary forms…Even in the familiar relationship of an old woman and her cat, Le Guin finds an ambit for challenging moral insight and matter for an inquisitiveness that probes the deep time of evolution… Blogs may not be novels, but a blog by Le Guin is no ordinary blog, either. It is a comfort to know, as reality seems to grow more claustrophobic and inescapable, that she remains at her desk, busily subverting our world.”

The New Republic

“[Le Guin’s] clever observations and sharp, nimble prose provide a window into the interior life of the award-winning novelist.”

Harper’s Bazaar​

“[No Time to Spare] touches on… everything from feminism to swear words in fiction. Each entry is filled with warmth, insight, and humor.”

Real Simple

“Le Guin is a natural story­teller, and these snippets from her life are inarguably delightful. She is certainly a lioness in winter here, as focused as she has ever been on the things that matter most to her. Old age is not for the young, she posits—and it is a slogan not intended as complaint, but rallying cry. Spend a little time with octoge­narian Ursula K. Le Guin, and the prospect of growing old becomes a bit less daunting.”

BookPage

“Le Guin is 88 and shows no sign of slowing down in this essay collection, dispensing serious wisdom about our world, politics, literature, aging, and more.”

Book Riot

“Reading the latest book from Portland writer Ursula K. Le Guin… is a bit like having a one-way conversation with a funny, cranky, keen-eyed old friend… Even when you want to quibble with her, Le Guin keeps you thoroughly engaged… It can be fun. It can be startling. It can get your back up… As you might expect from an author whose career has been devoted to imagining alternative worlds in close detail, she has a knack for stepping back from life on Earth and seeing it for the strange thing it is.”

The Oregonian

“Le Guin is a thoughtful and careful writer, and so her opinions are thoughtfully and carefully organized. She knows what she thinks, and she writes so well that you’ll want to return to these candid essays… like returning to an older, wiser friend.”

Omnivoracious

No Time to Spare presents the best of Le Guin’s blog: sharp-eyed, big-hearted, idiosyncratic and highly enjoyable… Both Le Guin’s eye for detail and her dry wit are on full display here… Readers will find much to think about in this wise and eloquent collection.”

Shelf Awareness

“To Le Guin… what truly matters are the words she thinks about, rigorous in her examination. Her expression of these thoughts reads more like mini-essays than blog posts and invite close reading, which always reaps rich rewards, the true gift of this lovely book.”

Booklist

“Spirited, wry reflections on aging, literature, and America’s moral life… An entertaining collection… Thoughtful musings from a deft and sharply insightful writer.”

Kirkus

“Short, punchy, and canny meditations on aging, literature, and cats… [Le Guin] offers her many fans a chance to share her clear-eyed experience of the everyday.”

Publishers Weekly

Praise for Ursula K. Le Guin

“There is no better spirit in all of American letters than that of Ursula Le Guin.”

—Choire Sicha, Slate

“As a deviser of worlds, as a literary stylist, as a social critic and as a storyteller, Le Guin has no peer. From the time of her first published work in the mid-1960s, she began to push against the confines of science fiction, bringing to bear an anthropologist’s acute eye for large social textures and mythic structures, a fierce egalitarianism and a remarkable gift of language, without ever renouncing the sense of wonder and the spirit of play inherent in her genre of origin.”

—Michael Chabon

“One of the most original imaginations ever to grace American letters… Through decades and scores of books, the genre Le Guin made her own has itself grown up—writers from David Mitchell to Salman Rushdie have walked through the door Le Guin opened… To sit and talk with Le Guin is to engage a powerful mind that has responded to ideological entrapments or career bumps by carpentering a new space for itself. She is brisk and funny, but unsparing when asked to comment on something which, in her mind, does not measure up… She shows that stories that stand the test of time can come from something as simple as fellowship: like a family, like an extraordinary body of work, like a house built from a kit, standing proudly on a hill, more than a hundred years later.”

—John Freeman, Boston Globe

“Le Guin, of course, has long been one of our most powerful writers of conscience.”

—David L. Ulin, Los Angeles Times

“It’s hard to think of another living author who has written so well for so long in so many styles as Ursula K. Le Guin.”

—Scott Timber, Salon

“She never loses touch with her reverence for the immense what is.”

Margaret Atwood

“Ursula K. Le Guin’s prose breathes light and intelligence. She can lift fiction to the level of poetry and compress it to the density of allegory.”