Book Club: Octavia E. Butlerâs Pasadena and a book giveaway
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Growing up in Pasadena, science fiction writer Octavia E. Butler rode the bus everywhere and constantly scribbled ideas about distant worlds and her desire to be a writer in dime-store notebooks, diaries and envelope backs.
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âOctavia E. Butler never asked to be here, may not have picked it if she had had the druthers, but she made do. Pasadena. Crown of the Valley. Earth,â writes journalist Lynell George in a new book exploring the authorâs early life and writing influences.
After working as a telemarketer, potato chip inspector and dishwasher, Butler went on to a groundbreaking writing career, publishing 12 novels and several short-story collections. She earned two Nebula and two Hugo awards and became the first science fiction writer to win a MacArthur âgeniusâ grant.
On Wednesday, George, author of âA Handful of Dirt, A Handful of Sky: The World of Octavia E. Butler,â and metro reporter Julia Wick, author of our Essential California newsletter, will join the Los Angeles Times Book Club to discuss Butlerâs work and her enduring legacy.
Butlerâs 1993 âParable of the Sowerâ envisioned a Los Angeles ravaged by climate change and economic injustice where people are scraping by just to survive. The author died in 2006 but her novel has surged in popularity in recent months. âParable of the Sowerâ landed on both the Los Angeles Times and New York Times bestseller lists this fall.
Two other Butler novels, âWild Seedâ and âDawn,â are in development for TV series.
Book giveaway
The book club meetup begins at 7 p.m. PT on Nov. 18 and will be livestreamed on the L.A. Timesâ Facebook page, YouTube and Twitter. Sign up at Eventbrite for a reminder and direct links. This event is free.
This month, weâre doing our first book club giveaway. When you register for this event, you can receive a free copy of one of 10 books written by Butler or another sci-fi great â thanks to a generous donation from the authorâs estate.
The books will be shipped to book club readers on a first-come, first-served basis from Vromanâs Bookstore.
âVromanâs was Octaviaâs local bookstore for most of her life, and to show gratitude for the important service they perform in the L.A. community, the Estate of Octavia E. Butler and longtime literary agent Merrilee Heifetz are funding the purchase of these 700 books to be given away,â said Ernestine Walker, Butlerâs cousin.
âBy choosing all novels by Black writers of imaginative fiction, many of whom honor Octavia for paving the way, we also hope to thank her readers by offering them free copies of five of her books as well. We are also grateful to the L.A. Times for all theyâve done to create and support this wonderful event.â
The giveaway list features five of Butlerâs books, âKindred,â âParable of the Sower,â âParable of the Talents,â âWild Seedâ and âFledgling.â It also includes âDark Matter: A Century of Speculative Fiction From the African Diaspora,â edited by Sheree R. Thomas; âBinti: The Complete Trilogyâ by Nnedi Okorafor; âAn Unkindness of Ghostsâ by Rivers Solomon; âPetâ by Akwaeke Emezi; and âHow Long âTil Black Future Month?â by N.K. Jemisin.
What to read next?
This past month book clubbers have been reading and sharing Octavia Butler stories.
Many readers have a favorite. Mine is probably âParable of the Sowerâ; Iâm captivated by her dystopian L.A. of the 2020s, though Iâm still working my way through her novels.
My colleague Tracy Brown is a fan of âDawn,â the first book from the Xenogenesis/Lilithâs Brood series. âItâs a bit more hard sci-fi than some of her other works, but it was the first novel of hers I read and remains a favorite, as it deals with so many themes through the lens of alien/human relations,â Tracy says. âThe series also touches on humanityâs destructive impulses, which feels a bit relevant to now.â
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Get up to speed with our Essential California newsletter from reporter Julia Wick, who will discuss Octavia E. Butler's legacy and writing at our Nov. 18 event.
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Book club reader Mayor Cooley agrees: âI recently finished âDawn,â so Iâd have to say itâs my favorite. The idea of sort of a retelling of the Eve and Mitochondrial Eve origin stories complete with a Black woman is irresistible.â
Tracy adds that the first work she read by Butler was âBloodchildâ and says the short-story collection is a good gateway to her other works.
Several other readers shared their love of âKindred,â one of Butlerâs standalone novels. âIt blew my mind in the best possible way,â says Anna Elves in the book clubâs Facebook group.
Teacher Lisa Vasquez says sheâs been sharing âKindredâ with her students since 1995. âButler deploys a classic sci-fi trope of time travel to educate her readers about some of the horrors of slavery,â she says.
But the author of âA Handful of Dirtâ has trouble picking her favorite after spending so much time immersed in the Butler archive at the Huntington Library.
Georgeâs new book includes the authorâs handwritten notes and lists, comments from early teachers and carefully documented details of her struggles to build a life as a writer. Butler wrote: âThe biggest obstacle I had to overcome was my own fear and self doubt.â
During interviews and conferences, people often asked Butler: What does science fiction mean to you?
âShe answered it in many ways over the years,â George writes in this excerpt from her book. âScience fiction allowed her to reach for something beyond what she could visualize. Reading through a draft of a speech Octavia was puzzling out, I was struck by a particular answer. Science fiction is ⊠a handful of earth and a handful of sky and everything around and in between.â
What questions do you have for our book club guests? Email us ahead of Wednesdayâs meetup at [email protected].
Sign up for our Book Club newsletter
Get the latest news, events and more from the Los Angeles Times Book Club, and help us get L.A. reading and talking.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.