Weekly Classics Discussions

By classicauthors

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A classics discussion book! Want to talk about all things related to classic stories and authors? Dive in to... More

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William Shakespeare
Anne Brontë
J.K. Rowling
Emily Brontë
Charles Dickens
Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
Thomas Hardy
Alexandre Dumas
Jane Austen
Louisa May Alcott
J.R.R. Tolkien
Harper Lee
C.S. Lewis
Leo Tolstoy
Charlotte Brontë
Enid Blyton
Ernest Hemingway
Arthur Miller
Emily Dickinson
Oscar Wilde
Evelyn Waugh
Mary Shelley
Percy Bysshe Shelley
Jerome K. Jerome
Mikhail Bulgajov
Bram Stoker
L. Frank Baum
Anita Desai
John Steinbeck
Salman Rushdie
Arundhati Roy
Jhumpa Lahiri
Edgar Allan Poe
Ray Bradbury
H. G. Wells
Jack London
Rabindranath Tagore
Philip K. Dick
Ken Follett
Karl Heinrich Ulrichs
Victor Hugo
George Orwell
Pearl S. Buck
L. M. Montgomery
Sukumar Ray
Joyce Carol Oates
Rudyard Kipling
H.P. Lovecraft
J. D. Salinger
Nikolai Gogol
Virginia Woolf
S.E. Hinton
Haruki Murakami
John Green
William Blake
Margaret Mitchell
Aldous Huxley
Ralph Ellison
F. Scott Fitzgerald
Toni Morrison
Sylvia Plath
Kazuo Ishiguro
John Milton
Franz Kafka
John Donne
Mark Twain
Agatha Christie
Elizabeth Gaskell
Sir Walter Scott
Lewis Carroll
Joseph Conrad
T. S. Eliot
Frances Hodgson Burnett
The Brothers Grimm
Matthew Arnold
Alice Walker
William Golding
V. S. Naipaul
John Keats
Margaret Atwood
S.T Coleridge
R.L Stevenson

Octavia E. Butler

47 7 6
By classicauthors

"I'd rather see the others."
"What others?"
"The ones who make it. The ones living in freedom now."
"If any do."
"They do."
"Some say they do. It's like dying, though, and going to heaven. Nobody ever comes back to tell you about it."
― Octavia E. Butler, Kindred

American author Octavia Estelle Butler was born in 1947 and passed away in 2006. She received multiple awards throughout her career and was best known for her science fiction. Butler was also the first science fiction writer ever to receive the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship award.

In many of her novels, such as 'Patternmaster,' 'Kindred,' 'Dawn' and 'Parable of the Sower', she blended elements of science fiction and African American spiritualism. Other prevalent themes in her work included future societies, superhuman powers, and hybridization.

Butler also explained her view of humanity as inherently flawed by an innate tendency towards hierarchical thinking. She believed this type of thinking led to intolerance, violence, and could, if not checked, lead to the ultimate destruction of our species.

This week's questions:

Butler is widely praised for her unflinching exposition of human flaws, which she depicts with striking realism. Her novels have also been described as "evocative" and "often troubling" explorations of "far-reaching issues of race, sex, power."

-What are some of your favorite stories that tackle the darker aspects of humanity?

-What do you think makes science fiction a great vehicle for shedding light on non-fictional real-world issues?

We also welcome any other discussion or comments about Octavia E. Butler or her works.

If you have another author you'd like to see a discussion on, please leave it in the comments below for a chance to be featured in a future chapter!

Resources:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octavia_E._Butler

https://www.octaviabutler.com/

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