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Xenogenesis, or Lilith's Brood by Octavia E. Butler
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Xenogenesis, or Lilith's Brood

by Octavia E. Butler

Series: Xenogenesis ( Omnibus 1 - 3)

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Showing 1-5 of 17 (next | show all)
Book 1 was great and my favorite. ( )
  dendrea | Apr 24, 2009 |
An unbelievably phenomenal book -- well, collection, I guess I should say. It includes the three novels: Dawn, Adulthood Rites, and Imago. Deals with the interactions between the aliens who rescue/capture the last of the human race. Dawn is an excellent portrayal of the dynamic between captor and captive. Adulthood Rites: the crossing of boundaries between the same, which leads to Imago: the intermingling of the two cultures and the true synthesis. To further these themes, Butler is very careful in the choosing of the main character's gender in each novel. The main character in Dawn is female and is of the captives but uses her position to further the cause of the captors; in Adulthood Rites, male and sides with the dominant group but sympathizes with the most rejected group of the captives; in Imago, the main character is genderless and assists in the integration of both groups. Freaking loved it. Finished it a good three weeks ago but still, at random moments of the day, I'll think of it for some odd reason. Pretty sweet. Also, the first book in a long time (since graduation, in fact) that kept me up all night until I finished the novel. Which means: I pulled three very late nights within days of each other.
RestlessLiterati ( )
  Chamelline | Apr 14, 2009 |
The earth was destroyed long ago (by humans). Aliens rescued a few and now, generations later, wake them from cryo and plan to help them repopulate the earth. There are a few little catches, like the aliens always planned to cross-breed with the humans to repopulate. ( )
  stunik | Mar 27, 2009 |
Octavia Butler’s Xenogenesis novels were first compiled into one volume in 1989, but that compilation is now out of print. As with Seed to Harvest, Grand Central Publishing has reissued the compilation in an attractive trade paperback to capture new readers. And I’m glad they did, because I probably wouldn’t have read these books otherwise.

When I finished Lilith’s Brood, I actually wasn’t sure whether I liked it or not, but I thought about it a great deal, which I think is a sign of a book worth reading. The underlying theme disturbed me, partly because I didn’t find much hope in it, partly because I found myself agreeing with the series’ assessment: that humankind is fated by our own biology to destroy ourselves.

Lilith’s Brood includes three novels: Dawn, Adulthood Rites and Imago, which comprise the Xenogenesis series. The story starts 250 years after a devastating nuclear war. The few human survivors have been picked up by an alien spacecraft and kept in stasis while the aliens, the Oankali, study them. Lilith is one of the first to be awakened and to be integrated into an Oankali family. She is being trained to awaken others, to introduce them to their new reality and their alien hosts, and to reveal the Oankali’s plan: to produce Oankali-human offspring, a brand-new hybrid species.

The Oankali are genetic engineers and reproduce by genetic manipulation. They have no disease or old age, and they can communicate with one another at the cellular level. They survive by traveling through space and finding species with promising genetic traits to mate with, such as humans. However, this means that humans can no longer reproduce with one another; the Oankalis have disabled their fertility. Also, when the Oankali leave, they will consume the remainder of Earth’s resources for the journey.

Of course, there is rebellion. Many humans choose to live long, childless lives rather than join with the Oankali. Lilith does not, because having been integrated with an Oankali family, she has become physically dependent on them. The next two books follow the lives of two of her children, as the Oankali-human interbreeding progresses. I don’t think I would have been compelled to keep reading the second novel if it were a separate sequel; each book on its own seems somewhat incomplete.

Throughout all three novels, the humans — living in primitive conditions on Earth — are portrayed as without hope, a species that, if allowed to reproduce, would attempt to destroy itself again within a few generations. Humans are hierarchical and competitive, unlike Oankali. As individuals, they can be intelligent and compassionate. But as a group, they are violent, destructive and territorial. Even when the aliens allow some humans to start a new colony on Mars and have children, the Oankali hold out no hope for their future.

That’s what makes this series so disturbing. The only hope posited is essentially that a greater power from the outside will find us, cure all our diseases and create with us a better people than we can ever hope to be. We are unable to cure ourselves, doomed by our own biology to always be fighting and murdering one another. I look at the news every day and feel that this is true. But I don’t want it to be true. I want humans to be capable of evolving past whatever impulse causes us to want to destroy one another. I want us to save ourselves, not look to some alien or god to save us.

But if I’m looking for that kind of resolution, I won’t find it in Lilith’s Brood. Still, I’m glad I read it. Even if I don’t ultimately agree with Butler’s conclusions, her writing made me think about and question some of my own assumptions. ( )
  sturlington | Mar 13, 2009 |
I think if I could just bring one book on a desert isle, I would consider the Octavia Butler omnibus, Xenogenesis. It's also been released under different names such as Lilith's Brood as well as the three individual books - Dawn, Adulthood Rites, and Imago. It's a large set (nearly 900 pages in the edition I have) which tells the story of a woman (Lilith) who was saved by aliens (Oankali) after a nuclear war. The Oankali are a three sexed species which require new influx of genes to survive and evolve and they get this by interbreeding with whatever new species they happen to come across. The Oankali want to colonize the Earth with human-Oankali hybrids. Needless to say some humans are not thrilled by this idea and this conflict set the stage for the story and for the return to post-nuclear Earth. Xenogenesis takes you through the struggle for identity, race, religion, and what makes us human. It also may challenge your views on gender, sex, orientation, and what makes a family. ( )
2 vote melsmarsh | Dec 1, 2008 |
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Series (with order)
Canonical Title
Original publication date
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Epigraph
Dedication
First words
Alive!
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Canonical titleXenogenesis, or Lilith's Brood
Original publication date2000
SeriesXenogenesis (100 | Omnibus 1 - 3)
First wordsAlive!
DescriptionLilith's Brood is a collection of three works by Octavia Butler: Dawn, Adulthood Rites and Imago. The three volumes of this science fiction series were previously collected in the now out of print volume, Xenogenesis.
Book description
Lilith's Brood is a collection of three works by Octavia Butler: Dawn, Adulthood Rites and Imago. The three volumes of this science fiction series were previously collected in the now out of print volume, Xenogenesis.

Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0446676101, Paperback)

Dawn: After nuclear war destroys the world, Earths survivors are rescued by the miraculously powerful Oankali aliens- who survive by merging genetically with primitive peoples without their permission. Adulthood Rites: Desperate to regain their world, childless humans seek to cleanse the alien taint by kidnapping hybrid children. But the raiders are blind to the truth of Earths new children. Imago: The futures of both humans and aliens rest in one young beings successful metamorphosis into adulthood.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:04 -0400)

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