Kindred

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Cover of Kindred by Octavia E. Butler 0807083690title:

Kindred (Bluestreak)

author:Octavia E. Butler
format:Paperback Buy Kindred Now
publisher:Beacon Press
released:February, 2004
isbn:0807083690
isbn-13:9780807083697
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Customer Reviews

Another Classic - Rated 4/5
Female authors, when they are as good as Ms Butler, produce a story of great depth that is a pleasure to read. She will be classed among others like Iris Johansen (Long after midnight)and Janet Evanovich (One for the money) and Julien Glazer (The Cephae). One can only hope that books like these will keep popping up for us to read.


I love this book - Rated 5/5
This is a excellent read. It will keep you wanting more. I am not a science fiction fan. But if this is what it is I want more.


Good introduction to Sci-fi... - Rated 5/5
I liked this book so much not because I thought that it was relevant to today, because it wasn't, and not because of any social commentary it may have made about slavery or anything quite as noble as that, I liked it because, simply put, it was a good story. As someone who has never read or been interested in the science fiction genre I found `KINDRED' by Octavia Butler to be right up my ally. I was a bit skeptical when I picked up `KINDRED' because as I stated I was not interested in reading science fiction but it had come so highly recommended that I decided to try it and now I see what everyone was raving about! I loved the way Butler transported the reader back and forth from the 20th century to the 18th century so seamlessly and managed to keep me on the edge of my seat wanting to know what was going to happen next. In fact I liked Butler's work so much that I think I will even read more of her books...despite the fact that they are science fiction. (don't gang up on me all at once science fiction fans :-)


A Time of Blacks, Whites, and Grays - Rated 5/5
There are very few Afro-American science fiction writers, and even fewer of them are female writers, but they all have one thing in common: They write excellent fiction. Butler is not only no exception, she is one of the standard setters, and this work is a prime example.

This is a story of Dana, a modern Afro-American writer married to a white writer, who is drawn back in time to live with Rufus, plantation and slave owner in the period of 1815 - 1830, and also her distant ancestor. Though the mechanism by which she is forced back in time is never rationally explicated, this is almost immaterial, and Dana (and the reader) must simply deal with the transfer as a fact. But she is always drawn back at those times when Rufus is in danger of losing his life, from a near drowning to a contemplated suicide. When she helps him out of sheer humanitarianism, it leads to her having a rather strange position within his household, neither wholly slave nor anything close to being the equal of the whites. From this position, she can observe all the interactions between owner and slave, and at least initially be somewhat shielded from the worst of the living conditions of the slaves.

That shielding will not last, as Butler develops a powerful theme of how unbridled power leads to abuses that crush lives and hope, and just as much imposes character changes in the wielder and the recipient of such power. As a stark portrait of living conditions in that time, as a diatribe that exposes just how much has been conveniently forgotten about slavery and its demeaning, demoralizing effects, this work will evoke emotions of shame, rage, and empathy with all who are, through no fault of their own, caught in situations with very limited choices. This theme is just as much an indictment of male dominance as it is of slavery, just one more example of power wielded inappropriately.

The character of Dana is vividly portrayed, as she slowly changes from modern American to someone who accepts compromises of principal in the name of survival, till she is a person who can barely recognize who and what she was before these incidents. Rufus and his father are also very well delineated, and the personal interactions of Dana, Rufus, and several of the slaves drive much of the plot action. Somewhat less well shown is the character of Dana's husband, and his motivations and actions don't ever seem to gel into a full-bodied person, a pity as this could have been the third pole of her theme, the reaction of a modern, liberal white to these conditions.

Butler's prose is more than adequate to her task, often lean and starkly descriptive, but there are places where I felt she should have added additional detail, dwelt on some scenes in greater depth, in order to better bring out the true horror of the situation.

Butler does not have the recognition (or the sales numbers) of Toni Morrison, but with this book she shows that she belongs in the same company. Whether this book is read as obviously well researched historical fiction, as science fiction that meets the prime criteria of that field as a literature of ideas, or as a novel of character, it is prime fodder for thought, while engaging all of your emotions.

--- Reviewed by Patrick Shepherd (hyperpat


A Quantum Leap into History! - Rated 5/5
This is a classis book that connects modern literary to a historical time and place. You are immediately drawn into the story by the powerful opening first pages. The idea of connecting 1970s LA to slavery times in the deep South by using time travel is a unique way of allowing the reader to enlighten their ideas about slavery in a very modern context.

Miss Butler's book not only encourages black people to know about the struggles in their history but also for white people to understand what was happening to African Americans during slavery. At times it's sad and heart rendering. You are transported into another time by the excellent literary skills of Octavia Butler. I felt connected to Dana's character and how she begins to find out about her ancestry, a story that probably is familiar with most families in America.

I thoroughly enjoyed this book, as a friend recommended it to me. I felt it was a written well. It did not linger on things that didn't push the story forward. The relationships between the slaves and their masters are not detailed enough for you to fully understand the reality but the relationship that Dana has with both parties fulfils that need to know more about the slave-master relationship.

The only criticism is that there is not enough of the story that focuses on the slaves and their relationship with Dana and her husband. I think I would have love to her more about Sarah's life and the slave community that Dana has to fit into. I would also liked to have seen more about how Dana and her husband coped with life changing events that were happening to them.

Overall it is one the best books I've read. I am an avid reader of Toni Morrison and I would thoroughly recommend that people who love reading black literature would adore this book.

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