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Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler
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Parable of the Sower

by Octavia E. Butler

Series: Parable of the Sower (1)

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
1,479222,432 (4.13)50
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Grand Central Publishing (2000), Edition: Warner Books Ed, Paperback, 352 pages

Member:burkbum
Collections:Your libraryRating:****
Tags:Science Fiction

Member recommendations

  1. GCPLreader recommends Into the Forest by Jean Hegland
  2. the_awesome_opossum recommends Bel Canto by Ann Patchett, "Both novels are about human connections formed in the face of unusual crises. Very competent and well-written, both books had much the same vibe about (see more) them"
  3. amberwitch recommends Galveston by Sean Stewart
  4. amberwitch recommends The Diary of a Young Girl by Anne Frank, "Both told as diaries written by young women growing up 'under siege'."
  5. amberwitch recommends Mara and Dann: An Adventure by Doris Lessing, "Both featuring young female protagonists of colour, traveling north looking for a place to live after her society disintegrated, partially due to climatical (see more) changes."
  6. storyjunkie recommends World War Z: An Oral History of the Zombie War by Max Brooks, "Both are tales of how to survive a world gone mad, though there are no zombies in Butler's. Both works' treatment of the human questions are equally nuanced, (see more) variable, and detailed."
  7. thesmellofbooks recommends Dhalgren by Samuel R. Delany, "A very different dystopia written by a very different African-American science fiction writer. Yet the intensity and humanity of Parable of the Sower are (see more) present as well in this much older book."
  8. infiniteletters recommends The Girl Who Owned A City by O.T. Nelson
  9. infiniteletters recommends The Postman by David Brin
  10. infiniteletters recommends Mind-Call by Wilanne Schneider Belden

(see all 11 recommendations)

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Showing 1-5 of 22 (next | show all)
A young woman with intriguing ideas about religion has to make her way across California with a destitute band of survivors after her gated community is destroyed. Not an optimistic view of our future, but a great read. Likewise its sequel, Parable of the Talents, in which all of the heroine's plans are destroyed and we lose a little sympathy with her.

http://reviewingwhatever.blogspot.com...
  savethegreyhounds | Nov 10, 2009 |
This book is riveting. It's the story, told by a hyperempathetic California teenager, of American society in 2024, about ten or fifteen years after ecological collapse.

We meet Lauren, the narrator, when she's about fifteen years old. She's a bright, contemplative preacher's daughter, who has decided that she has found her own God: change. The book is sprinkled with discussions of her beliefs, which she's named Earthseed, and free verse from her "Book of the Living". By her eighteenth birthday, terrifying new synthetic drugs and an "eat the rich" mentality have taken hold outside Los Angeles, and the American government has relaxed business laws to the extent that debt slavery has become more common than ever.

Lauren is a wise, clever, and sympathetic protagonist, and the world she inhabits is engaging and perhaps a little too plausible. I plowed through this book in just a few hours, always eager to find out what would happen next, who'd make it through to the next chapter, and what was on each new character's mind.

(One further note -- I know plenty of folks who require a touch of the fantastic in their reading. If you're one of those people, you may as well know: This is NOT sci-fi. It takes place in the future and there's one mention of an improbably tiny radio. That's all you get.) ( )
  kexline | Sep 23, 2009 |
For once, I'm thankful that my imagination is not particularly visual—if it had been, I think I might well have found Parable of the Sower too difficult to read. Butler is unsparing in her creation of a dystopia which seems scarily possible; a world where global warming has devastated the planet, wreaking havoc with the water supply and causing near-total societal breakdown.

I enjoyed Butler's prose, which is elegant and vivid, and admired the thoroughness of her word building (world destruction?) but really only liked the book as a whole. The pacing was a little off, somehow; the first half of the book was very slow, and the ending felt more like a prelude than a resolution. I wasn't sold on the 'Sharer' idea, which seemed a little random and rather too mystical in a book so otherwise realistic. Similarly, I wasn't taken with the Earthseed religion which Lauren founds—to me, her ideas seemed much less deep and meaningful than they were intended to be, occasionally even a little hokey—and I was frustrated at not being able to tell if Butler intended for Lauren's beliefs to be profound or if she was deliberately making them somewhat naive. ( )
1 vote siriaeve | Jul 21, 2009 |
Octavia Butler was the best kind of sci-fi writer - the kind who use the futuristic or fantastic element, not to make something go boom for the sake of going boom, but to push the boundary, pick at the scab and say something amazing, and maybe a little scary, about our world.

This may not be a preachy book, but its certainly not subtle. Class warfare (literally), a ravaged environment, human trafficking - these are the things Lauren and the other characters in this book struggle with. These aren't easy things to deal with, but it helps that the book is beautifully written and ultimately hopeful. Butler's prose and the Earthseed poetry she's included are lyrical and compelling.

http://archthinking.blogspot.com/2009...
  lorin77 | Jun 17, 2009 |
Showing 1-5 of 22 (next | show all)
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Prodigy is, at its essence, adaptability and persistent, positive obsession. Without persistence, what remains is an enthusiasm of the moment. Without adaptability, what remains may be channeled into destructive fanaticism. Without positive obsession, there is nothing at all. -- EARTHSEED: THE BOOKS OF THE LIVING by Lauren Oya Olamina
All that you touch / You Change. / All that you Change / Changes You. / The only lasting truth / is Change. / God / Is Change. -- EARTHSEED: THE BOOKS OF THE LIVING
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I had my recurring dream last night.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Wikipedia in English (1)

Parable of the Sower (novel)

Book description
Set in a dystopian future, Parable of the Sower centers on a young woman who possesses what Butler dubbed as hyperempathy – the ability to feel the perceived pain and other sensations of others – who develops a benign philosophical and religious system during her childhood in the remnants of a gated community in Los Angeles. Civil society is near collapse due to resource scarcity and poverty. When the community's security is compromised, her home is destroyed and her family murdered. She travels north with some survivors to try to start a community where her religion, called Earthseed, can grow.

Amazon.com (ISBN 0446601977, Mass Market Paperback)

Octavia E. Butler, the grande dame of science fiction, writes extraordinary, inspirational stories of ordinary people. Parable of the Sower is a hopeful tale set in a dystopian future United States of walled cities, disease, fires, and madness. Lauren Olamina is an 18-year-old woman with hyperempathy syndrome--if she sees another in pain, she feels their pain as acutely as if it were real. When her relatively safe neighborhood enclave is inevitably destroyed, along with her family and dreams for the future, Lauren grabs a backpack full of supplies and begins a journey north. Along the way, she recruits fellow refugees to her embryonic faith, Earthseed, the prime tenet of which is that "God is change." This is a great book--simple and elegant, with enough message to make you think, but not so much that you feel preached to.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:57:53 -0400)

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