It is hard to tell a really gripping tale of how I wrested a wild-oat
seed from its husk, and then another, and then another, and then
another, and then another, and then I scratched my gnat bites, and Ool
said something funny, and we went to the creek and got a drink and
watched newts for a while, and then l found another patch of oats. . . .
No, it does not compare, it cannot compete with how I thrust my spear
deep into the titanic hairy flank while Oob, impaled on one huge
sweeping tusk, writhed screaming, and blood spouted everywhere in
crimson torrents, and Boob was crushed to jelly when the mammoth fell on
him as I shot my unerring arrow straight through eye to brain.
That
story not only has Action, it has a Hero. Heroes are powerful. Before
you know it, the men and women in the wild-oat patch and their kids and
the skills of the makers and the thoughts of the thoughtful and the
songs of the singers are all part of it, have all been pressed into
service in the tale of the Hero. But it isn't their story. It's his.
- Ursula K. Le Guin