Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 19. An account of how Le Guin was finally able to write Always Coming Home, using not an imaginary world but the transfigured Napa Valley of her childhood. Acknowledges her debt to Native American worldview known through its myths
Welcome to the 40th Annual Mythopoeic Conference As I returned home from Mythcon 38 in Berkeley two ...
A few novels on our conference theme, especially those taking place in Northern California, but also...
Welcome to The Mythic Circle #14. We hear raves from all quarters about the Tolkein Centennial in Ox...
Transcript of panel discussion from 1988 Mythopoeic Conference. Author, illustrator, composer, and c...
Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 19. Defines indigenous fantasy—fantasy in a contemporary, “real-world...
Scholar Guest of Honor speech from Mythcon 35. Insightful study of the pattern of references to sea-...
Discusses how fantasy authors create characters, drawing on Jungian psychology and essays by Ursula ...
Ursula K. Le Guin, whose career and influence are examined in brief in the preceding note by David B...
How does mythopoeic literature address the relationship between the land and its inhabitants, betwee...
Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 15. A poetic and personal paean to the power and importance of story ...
Guest of Honor address, Mythcon 25. Discusses the uses of language among contemporary fantasists, bo...
Scholar Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 45. In his wide-ranging and conversational meditation on “Whe...
Reminiscences of the history of the Society on the occasion of its 25th anniversary
Calls Always Coming Home an “open-ended utopia” that presents the possibility of utopia without bein...
Inspired by the 60th anniversary of C.S. Lewis\u27s Till We Have Faces and The Last Battle, this yea...
Welcome to the 40th Annual Mythopoeic Conference As I returned home from Mythcon 38 in Berkeley two ...
A few novels on our conference theme, especially those taking place in Northern California, but also...
Welcome to The Mythic Circle #14. We hear raves from all quarters about the Tolkein Centennial in Ox...
Transcript of panel discussion from 1988 Mythopoeic Conference. Author, illustrator, composer, and c...
Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 19. Defines indigenous fantasy—fantasy in a contemporary, “real-world...
Scholar Guest of Honor speech from Mythcon 35. Insightful study of the pattern of references to sea-...
Discusses how fantasy authors create characters, drawing on Jungian psychology and essays by Ursula ...
Ursula K. Le Guin, whose career and influence are examined in brief in the preceding note by David B...
How does mythopoeic literature address the relationship between the land and its inhabitants, betwee...
Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 15. A poetic and personal paean to the power and importance of story ...
Guest of Honor address, Mythcon 25. Discusses the uses of language among contemporary fantasists, bo...
Scholar Guest of Honor speech, Mythcon 45. In his wide-ranging and conversational meditation on “Whe...
Reminiscences of the history of the Society on the occasion of its 25th anniversary
Calls Always Coming Home an “open-ended utopia” that presents the possibility of utopia without bein...
Inspired by the 60th anniversary of C.S. Lewis\u27s Till We Have Faces and The Last Battle, this yea...
Welcome to the 40th Annual Mythopoeic Conference As I returned home from Mythcon 38 in Berkeley two ...
A few novels on our conference theme, especially those taking place in Northern California, but also...
Welcome to The Mythic Circle #14. We hear raves from all quarters about the Tolkein Centennial in Ox...