Book description
From the New York Times bestselling author of Parable of the Sower and MacArthur “Genius” Grant, Nebula, and Hugo award winner
The visionary time-travel classic whose Black female hero is pulled through time to face the horrors of American slavery and explores the impacts of racism, sexism, and white supremacy…
Why read it?
17 authors picked Kindred as one of their favorite books. Why do they recommend it?
Kindred shocked me, and in both good and bad ways. I knew it was going to be a compelling story, but once I got into it was stunningly surprised by the timeline shifts and various lens scopes it relays. Octavia's a brilliant storyteller.
I’ve always been fascinated by terrible periods in history: the Nazis, witchcraft trials, and the American Deep South in the days of slavery. I need to know why people behaved in the heinous ways they did; paradoxically, a bit like time travel, the more I read, the less things make sense.
Our heroine is an African-American woman from modern times who finds herself sent back to early nineteenth-century Maryland when slavery was rife. We experience her reactions to it through a modern lens. It reminded me of the TV series Outlander in the way it builds whole lives back in…
From Iqbal's list on take you back in time and lose you there.
I am, to put it lightly, obsessed with the way Octavia Butler revolutionizes the timescape and invites us to speculate about worlds that could be. In this and so many of her books, her vision of Afrofuturism is one that reminds us that our ancestral pasts and our imagined futures are always connected.
I thought a lot about the future when I wrote my book, and I share Butler’s conviction that there is collective healing and liberation in revisiting and reimagining the past.
I also love that my neighborhood library in Pasadena is the one Octavia Butler used to frequent!
From Hajar's list on understanding revisionist history politics.
If you love Kindred...
I learned of this book from watching the television series, although I am a fan of Butler’s works anyway. The TV series was canceled (the episodes reached the halfway mark of the book), and I chose to read it due to how much I enjoyed the show. I was hooked and found it difficult to put this book down.
The protagonist lives between two worlds and suffers so many trials as she is bounced around from the present to the past. I felt her plight and admired the character’s strength in the face of every adversity.
This is probably the most famous book on my list, but I first read it just a couple years ago. I was so engrossed in it that I gave my husband almost scene-by-scene updates on our vacation. The story Butler weaves is so compelling that he even started asking for them.
Books about time travel abound, but few of them make the past come alive like this one. Butler takes the modern reader back to the antebellum South when her protagonist, a Black writer living in Los Angeles in the 1970s, is transported over a century back to Maryland’s Eastern…
From Katherine's list on historical fiction about the nineteenth century.
Kindred is more subtle than other novels in its main character’s efforts to change the past.
Dana, an African American woman, finds she has time-traveled back to the antebellum South where she witnesses the brutalities of slavery. However, she also realizes the plantation she is on is populated not only by her slave ancestors, but that the white owners are also her ancestors.
She finds herself forced to protect the slaveowner’s son, Rufus, even though she dislikes him, from accidental deaths, because he is her ancestor. In bonding with Rufus, Dana seeks to educate him about the wrongs of slavery…
From Tyler's list on time travel with characters who try to change history.
If you love Octavia E. Butler...
Kindred is an incredible novel that uses time travel to highlight the horrors of slavery by transporting a modern African American woman from California to the Virginian plantation where her ancestors were enslaved.
Through this experience, she gains a deeper appreciation for her ancestors’ strength and a better understanding of herself.
From Michelle's list on surviving the African American experience.
My list would not be complete without Octavia Butler’s Kindred. Ms. Butler trailblazing the way and being the first woman of color to write in science fiction and urban fantasy is the reason I am a writer today. Time traveling Dana was my first exposure to not just urban fantasy before the genre bore the name, but to seeing myself in fiction that I enjoyed reading, and writing fiction that I enjoyed reading. I became immersed in her story, in her world, in her life. For the time while I read, Kindred, I became Dana. That to me…
From Fannie's list on urban fantasy and paranormal mystery featuring POC.
I like this novel because it contrasts two vastly different worlds—both in the same country on the same planet, but in different time periods.
Dana Franklin, a young black woman, is suddenly swept out of her 1970s California home to an early Nineteenth Century Maryland plantation where she saves Rufus Weylin, the plantation owner’s five-year-old son, from drowning. She is “called” back many times over Rufus’ life when he’s in a jam, and each time she stays longer in the past. Over the course of her sojourns on the plantation, she must pass for a slave, which proves to be…
From David's list on science fiction about outsiders.
If you love Kindred...
When I was in college then grad school, everyone was talking about Octavia Butler. Given that I’m not particularly drawn to sci-fi, I ignored the talk. And then I read Kindred. It’s more an exploration of the legacy of slavery than it is a dystopian adventure, though the novel includes time-travel and adventure.
As with the other books on my list, the characters are complex and their dilemmas, seemingly irreconcilable. Set in 1976—significantly, the Bicentennial—the interracial couple at the center of the novel has to combat the attacks and abuses concerning racial mixing—in quite literal ways, as the female…
From David's list on complicated Black-white relations.
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