African American
Related: About this forumI am a huge nerd. Science fiction was one of my 1st loves
And Octavia E. Butler was a giant in my eyes.
I seemed to gravitate to female writers - Octavia Butler, Ursula Le Guin, Emma Bull, Anne McCaffery, etcetera etcetera... I enjoyed all of their work, but Octavia E. Butler was in her own league in my opinion.
I was just a white trash coal country hillbilly when I discovered her and it was her short stories that slapped my mind and started to wake my thoughts.
She made me imagine my way forward into her created worlds and backward into her life to attempt to understand what led her to take a particular path or make a particular choice in telling her story.
But beyond, and more important than, the deep thought and introspection she triggered in me was her voice - Clean clever prose. Precise word choices, nimble phrasing and entrancing story telling all in one writer. Novels Novellas and short stories she excelled at all of them.
Todays Google doodle reminded me that today was her birthday (and thank you Rogue Emissary for the OP pointing it out) and it struck me that I hadn't even thought of her since she passed.
Looks like I need to take a stroll over to my local Library.
Here is an article that points out that she was clairvoyant as well.
https://www.newyorker.com/books/second-read/octavia-butlers-prescient-vision-of-a-zealot-elected-to-make-america-great-again
Xipe Totec
(44,063 posts)I must have been 12 at the time and understood maybe 70% of the words but I was fascinated.
I fell in love with science fiction then and there.
SonofDonald
(2,050 posts)Bradburys tales were what got me into reading and enjoying so in the first place.
I just picked up most of his early works to read again and am remembering what was so good about them.
He could put magic down in print.
thbobby
(1,474 posts)Good SciFi with a humorous streak. I have read many of her short stories in Year's Best Science Fiction and have a book compilation of her short stories. I also love SciFi.
Kind of Blue
(8,709 posts)and I had no idea the author was a black woman. I can't even start to tell you of the effect of being a sci-fi/fantasy nerd Butler had on me as a young black woman. Now, as I'm approaching crone-dom, I jump out of my skin to see many sites, such as black girl nerds, and I can rest, happy and hopefully way before I die, that Butler has inspired African and African-American writers to explore and write ourselves into the future and that Ms. Butler did this. I need a tissue of joy right now
Thanks so much, Polack MSgt, and Google, for this remembrance. I fucking love it!
And Thank You for the link, too!
The Polack MSgt
(13,426 posts)Speculative fiction is looked at askance by so many "serious" critics and publishers that no one in the sci-fi/fantasy arena gets a fair judgement from them.
Glad to find a fellow fan. Happy you enjoyed the OP.
Kind of Blue
(8,709 posts)And forever grateful to my high school Lit teacher who insisted on the course for seniors way back when. She followed Univ. of Maryland's lead that I believe was the first in the nation to bring the course to its curriculum back in the '70s/early '80s. Since then, nobody could tell me it is not a serious genre.
Found recently that WEB Dubois wrote speculative fiction back in 1920s called The Comet and waiting for it to arrive any day now.