Mariella Gattini

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Ursula's Path

February 5, 2022

Joshua Tree National Park

Thinking about the importance of Ursula K. Le Guin’s life as a writer, I’m trying to find my own way in the same land she lived and loved, where she could create the worlds that accompanied her the rest of her life. Like her, I believe that literature is not escapism, literature is a way of making reality even more widespread without the need for sensationalism or overexposure of the subjects discussed, the ones fundamental for the structure of any story.

In my blog entry The Ones Who Walk Away, where I discuss current events inspired and supported by her short story The Ones Who Walk Away from Omelas, she’s aligned with the thoughts of Italian writer and philosopher Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837), who said that the happiness of the masses is the unhappiness of the individual (what William James called “lonely torture”), but in her work, she adds a more modern twist that offers a light at the end of the tunnel, a practical alternative to get away from what it seems inescapable. In fact, when she received a Lifetime Achievement award at The 65th National Book Awards, in 2014, she used that specific word when she said: “Books, they’re not just commodities. The profit motive is often in conflict with the aims of art. We live in capitalism. Its power seems inescapable, so did the divine right of kings.” Which makes me think that she was aware of the perils of money for the sake of money and its detrimental influence in the arts, something that she had deep in her mind until the end.

Here, in the United States, I finally am in the place I envisioned myself to be when I was twelve and my mom was far away. This country was for me not only a place to escape from the frightening times I was living during the coup in Chile and its aftermath—it also represented my future. Today I’m living in that future, so, in a way, I find myself in the place where a desperate little girl needed to be. That girl doesn’t exist anymore, but, just before she disappeared, she left me in this country, a country of smoke and mirrors that only a twelve-year-old can believe in. Now, I’m the one who walked away from my place of origin, imagining new places, places that can illustrate our real world, so that it can be more manageable, but without false promises. Maybe that was the reason I took my only child with me when she herself was twelve, who is making a life of her own in this country with no need for places to escape to in her own mind—because I didn’t want her go through the same predicaments I had to.

The path of a writer is long and unpredictable, because as Ursula says: “Every time you think you’ve found your way, the way changes.” In my view, it is because in order to look for possible solutions to our predicaments, we can only imagine the benefits of the changes we propose, we don’t really want to see the backlash of our decisions, otherwise, we would live in an impossible situation all the time, looking at a frail, naked reality that hurts, and hurts so much. Therefore, the solution is to dream for a better day ahead, until we make it. And when we do, we realize that all the struggles we have been through all that time have left traces of despair, of pain to the stomach, and of disillusion in our walk ahead.

Ursula and I walk together now, supported by so many other writers and artists, and often stopping at lines that linger, such as: “A little smoke lost in the air, that was the life of a man.”, by W. Somerset Maugham, or remain aware of what Hitchcock said once: “Drama is life with the dull bits cut out.” Also, taking into consideration Eva Hesse: “Life doesn’t last, art doesn’t last; it doesn’t matter.”, and Hannah Arendt: “Thinking is a lonely business.”, despite the fact that she made a distinction between loneliness and solitude. For Hannah, solitude meant that she was able to keep herself company, whereas loneliness was her inability to be there for herself.

Just like Ursula, the fact that I’m able to put my thoughts and the worlds that come to me in a book does not mean I stop thinking about those thoughts and those worlds that only I can see in that moment. Ideas are infinite and can take us to places never conceived before, and even after walking in the shoes of the protagonists for the duration of the story, we can still feel the pain, the anguish, and the joy they harbor way after we finish the story. However, stories must end before they really end, otherwise they would be unbearable for the reader.

According to Ursula K. Le Guin, writers are just like scientists, they name things, an exercise that she found deeply satisfying. We have to, because we deal with discoveries without a definition yet, without a label.

She passed away in 2018, but she still is among us in her books and documentaries that carry her name. To me, she is the mother I didn’t have in this country, a mother who speaks American English and guides me, not only in the formal ways of writing, but also in the bravery you need to have to be able to face the reality of our times, especially as a woman writer.

My last three books have strong women protagonists, three different individuals with different lives, different goals, and different upbringings, but all of them have something fundamental in their minds: nobody is going to define who they are but themselves. The three of them are submerged in a world dominated by men, a world that necessarily needs to unravel to finally show itself the way it is: frail and naked right in front of our eyes. A world that does not offer other than the promise of a new day that unfolds as a blank canvas.

  • Next:  Irrational Minds

  • Previous:  Predicting the Future


Posts by date

 2025

Jan 23   The War of the Words V

 2024

Oct 09   Kamala and The Tree of Knowledge

Jul 11   About Writing III

Jul 11   Actresses 101

Mar 06   What Linklater Got Wrong

Feb 09   Techno-Heaven

 2023

Dec 25   Peter Panish

Sep 01   Pleasure or Paradise?

Aug 21   The War of the Words IV

Aug 16   Indicted

Mar 11   Witch Hunt

 2022

Sep 15   Optics II

Jul 16   The War of the Words III

Mar 26   Irrational Minds

Feb 05   Ursula's Path

Jan 16   Predicting the Future

 2021

Sep 11   Con-Science

May 26   The War of the Words II

May 26   Halston

Mar 19   The War of the Words I

Jan 12   January 6th, 2021

 2020

Nov 02   Separated

Aug 26   Optics I

Jul 27   Name Calling

Jul 13   About Writing II

Jul 04   Mr. Shallow

Jun 11   Hidden Figures

Jun 03   9 Minutes

Apr 21   Signaling

Feb 18   ToKyoTokyo Series Part III

Jan 16   ToKyoTokyo Series Part II

 2019

Dec 20   ToKyoTokyo Series Part I

Nov 04   Mr. Power

Oct 10   Today Is a Good Day

Sep 05   Inspiration Point

Aug 08   The Ones Who Walk Away

Jul 25   On Feminism

Jun 16   Marie Colvin in a Private War

Jun 12   About Writing I

Jun 06   Nureyev

May 31   Nora and Her Neck

Apr 24   Home Less

Apr 11   The Passion Side of Love

Mar 25   Gloria Bell

Mar 03   Mary Shelley

Jan 12   Mr. Fart

 2018

Dec 15   My Orson

Dec 15   Ping-Pong

 2017

Dec 05   Breaking Away

Nov 30   Julieta and the Despair of Being a Woman

Oct 24   Stupro

Oct 04   The Painter

Aug 05   A Quiet Passion… No More

Jul 27   Worst-Case Scenario

Jun 15   Catfight 2016

May 17   From Girl to Woman Boss

Apr 17   South

Mar 29   The Forgotten

Mar 03   In

Feb 22   Lost

Feb 04   2017

 2016

Nov 10   Hillary Lost

Oct 10   Trump, Trumpettes, and the Politics of Hate

Sep 11   September 11th, Laura Rodríguez, and the Haunting Past

Aug 19   Hillary

Aug 13   Striking Gold

Jul 25   What Is in the Name

Jul 09   Free in Dallas

Jul 02   Carol and Orlando

May 31   Reality and Reality Perception

Apr 22   Il Sorpasso

Apr 19   Lena Dunham and Kitty Genovese

Feb 25   December in California

 2015

Dec 02   My Italian and I

Nov 29   Three Different Geographical Points; One Basic Premise

Nov 28   I’m a Woman

Nov 23   From My Childhood to Our Last Day

Nov 22   Paris

Nov 22   Films, Filmmakers, and Writers

Nov 18   I Live in Texas


Posts by series

 About Writing

Jun 12, 19  About Writing I

Jul 13, 20  About Writing II

Jul 11, 24  About Writing III

 Optics

Aug 26, 20  Optics I

Sep 15, 22  Optics II

 The War of the Words

Mar 19, 21  The War of the Words I

May 26, 21  The War of the Words II

Jul 16, 22  The War of the Words III

Aug 21, 23  The War of the Words IV

Jan 23, 25  The War of the Words V

 ToKyoTokyo

Dec 20, 19  ToKyoTokyo Series Part I

Jan 16, 20  ToKyoTokyo Series Part II

Feb 18, 20  ToKyoTokyo Series Part III

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