'Genre cannot contain Ursula Le Guin: she is a genre in herself' Zadie Smith
'Groundbreaking' Guardian
'No single work did more to upend the genre's conventions' Paris Review
A lone human emissary journeys from Earth to the planet of Winter, an alien world whose inhabitants can choose - and change - their gender.
His goal is to secure Winter's inclusion in a growing intergalactic civilisation, but to do so he must bridge the gulf between his own views and the culture he encounters.
Forced into a perilous partnership with an outcast on a journey across the planet's bitter, whirling snow, he learns how survival, trust and love take shape in a world nothing like his own.
A visionary classic, The Left Hand of Darkness reshaped fiction with its radical exploration of gender, human connection and power.
WITH AN INTRODUCTION FROM DAVID MITCHELL
Read MoreUrsula Le Guin is a chemist of the heartNo single work did more to upend the genre's conventions than The Left Hand of Darkness - Paris ReviewLe Guin was able to reimagine many concepts we take to be natural, shared, and unalterable - gender, utopia, creation, war, family, the city, the country - and reveal the all-too-human constructions at their center . . . Literature will miss her. There's no one like her