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Wikipedia:Article assessment/Hugo Award-winning works/The Left Hand of Darkness

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Assessment Article assessment
Hugo Award-winning works
Undergoing assessment
4 June 2006
25 June 2006
Assessments

A Canticle for Leibowitz
A Case of Conscience
A Deepness in the Sky
Doomsday Book
Dune (novel)
Ender's Game
Forever Peace
Gateway (novel)
Neuromancer
Rendezvous with Rama
Ringworld
Speaker for the Dead
Stranger in a Strange Land
The Diamond Age
The Demolished Man
The Forever War
The Left Hand of Darkness
The Moon Is a Harsh Mistress
To Say Nothing of the Dog
Where Late the Sweet Birds Sang

Assessment of an article under the topic Hugo Award-winning works.


Article: The Left Hand of Darkness

Details of the assessment method can be found at the main page. Feel free to add comments when you assess an article, or use the talk page for discussion.

Review by [User:Pastafarian Nights]

[edit]
  • Coverage and factuality: 1
  • Writing style: 8
  • Structure: 9
  • Aesthetics: 7
  • Overall: 6

There are no references, which is a pity, because otherwise this is a great article. I'm very familiar with the book, and found no factual errors, so fixing the lack of references shouldn't be too difficult. The parenthetical statement in the lead about Le Guin's distaste for the term "feminist science fiction" cries out for a quote from her on the topic.

Review by Sandpiper

[edit]

Or partial review. It would seem that someone felt the article lacked plot description, which was added and then deleted as a copyvio since the last contributors comments. I would agree, it didn't mention enough about the plot, and was therefore leaving out important points about the multiple messages LeGuin is putting across about society. What was added and deleted was plot detail, but actually did not cover what i would include. I find myself torn between including and discussing the ending, which is quite fundamental to what is being argued about the message of the book, and not spoiling it for the reader. Despite the impression given by the article, Estraven is about as un-nationalistic as Gordon of Khartoum. I felt a couple of statements based upon content of the story were wrong. My inclination is to give it a serious bit of rewriting, when I have time. On the other hand, as an introduction to the main points about the book it is ok.