Searoad
Searoad is a sandy track that runs between the town of Klatsand and the Pacific Ocean. Along Searoad you can meet the people who live in the little town and the people who come to stay for a night or a week’s vacation in one of the motels—Hanna’s Hideaway, the White Gull, and the Ship Ahoy. If you turn east, inland, off Searoad you might come to Lily Herne’s little house on Hemlock Street, where she brought up her illegitimate daughter, or you might find your way to Bill Weisler’s pottery above the creek, or you might get a good lunch at the Dancing Sand Dab.
If you went there in 1898 you might not find much but a few muddy streets, a lot of spruce trees, and a herd of elk; but then they built the Exposition Hotel, in 1906, where young Jane Herne fell in love with the manager. And all through the twentieth century you’ll find a Hambleton running Hambleton’s Market, on Main.
If you follow Searoad north you’ll come to Breton Head, where Virginia Herne lives now. South, you’ll pass the Inman house on the way toward Wreck Point. But if you turn west from Searoad across the dunes you’ll find only the long, long beach where the rain women walk and the foam women blow in the wind, at the continent’s edge, the beginning of the sea.
In her first completely mainstream book of fiction, Ursula K. Le Guin demonstrates why she is a major American novelist in any category.
Winner of the 1992 H.L. Davis Fiction Award
Winner of the 1991 Pushcart Prize (for “Bill Weisler”)
Originally published in 1991 by HarperCollins, Searoad is currently out of print as a standalone volume, but is included in the Library of America collection Five Novels.
One of the stories, “Hernes,” was published as a standalone novella in 2022 by Winter Texts.
Praise
“Various private lives in an Oregon seaside village are pried open for inspection in this winning example of Le Guin's best writing—meditative, perceptive, and dead-on in its characterizations. ... Another triumph.”
—Kirkus Reviews, starred review
Reviews and Articles
“8 Place-Based Novels That Are as Good as a Trip Around the World” by Pitchaya Sudbanthad, Electric Literature (11 December 2018)
“Malamud's Life, Le Guin's Searoad: The 21 greatest Oregon novels you've probably never heard of” by Douglas Perry, The Oregonian (28 February 2016)
“Glimpses: Ursula K. Le Guin’s Searoad” by Jo Walton, Tor.com (4 March 2011)
“Stories of small-town struggles: Ursula Le Guin experiments with genre in her novel Searoad” by Isobel Armstrong, Times Literary Supplement (13 March 1992)
“Beautiful but Fractured Tales” by Whitney Otto, Los Angeles Times (17 January 1992)
“The Awful Need for Weakness” by Monroe Engel, The New York Times (12 January 1992)
“The Sisters of Rain and Foam” by Frances Taliaferro, The Washington Post (8 December 1991)
“Le Guin Tries a Different Approach” by Peter Meinke, Sun Sentinel (1 December 1991)
“Discussing the book of short stories Searoad: Chronicles of Klatsand with author Ursula Le Guin,” an interview with Studs Terkel at WFMT (22 November 1991)
Review at Publishers Weekly (30 September 1991)