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Wild Seed
(Patternmaster #1)
by
In an "epic, game-changing, moving and brilliant" story of love and hate, two immortals chase each other across continents and centuries, binding their fates together -- and changing the destiny of the human race (Viola Davis). Doro knows no higher authority than himself. An ancient spirit with boundless powers, he possesses humans, killing without remorse as he jumps from
...more
Paperback, 307 pages
Published
March 17th 2020
by Grand Central Publishing
(first published 1980)
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“Recently, however, I began to suspect that calling myself a science fiction critic without having read anything by Octavia Butler bordered on the fraudulent.”
“Books to Look For” - Orson Scott Card
I have to thank OSC for the above-mentioned article (from 1990) which piqued my interest for reading Octavia Butler.
It is strange that I first read Wild Seed in January 2012, I loved it and it made me a lifelong fan of Octavia Butler, but since then I have not read any of the sequels. I have, however ...more
“Books to Look For” - Orson Scott Card
I have to thank OSC for the above-mentioned article (from 1990) which piqued my interest for reading Octavia Butler.
It is strange that I first read Wild Seed in January 2012, I loved it and it made me a lifelong fan of Octavia Butler, but since then I have not read any of the sequels. I have, however ...more

Dear Goodreads friends,
If you like to read science fiction / fantasy you should get to know Octavia Butler.
Love,
Lyn
Butler’s 1980 novel Wild Seed is the first chronological book in her Patternmaster series. This details the beginnings of the sub-race of humans that will, in Patternmaster, be set in the far future. Butler begins her narrative in 1390, in West Africa, where her protagonist Anyanwu meets a strange young man named Doro.
So begins a centuries old relationship, often rocky, between two ...more
If you like to read science fiction / fantasy you should get to know Octavia Butler.
Love,
Lyn
Butler’s 1980 novel Wild Seed is the first chronological book in her Patternmaster series. This details the beginnings of the sub-race of humans that will, in Patternmaster, be set in the far future. Butler begins her narrative in 1390, in West Africa, where her protagonist Anyanwu meets a strange young man named Doro.
So begins a centuries old relationship, often rocky, between two ...more

“In my years, I have seen that people must be their own gods and make their own good fortune. The bad will come or not come anyway.”

Absolutely fantastic! Wild Seed (Patternmaster #1) is my latest dip into Octavia Butler's work, and I continue be amazed by Butler's vision and talent. After her community is wiped out by slavers, Anyanwu, an immortal shape shifter and healer, travels to colonial America with another immortal named Doro. Their aims and origins are very different. Anyanwu wants to ...more

Absolutely fantastic! Wild Seed (Patternmaster #1) is my latest dip into Octavia Butler's work, and I continue be amazed by Butler's vision and talent. After her community is wiped out by slavers, Anyanwu, an immortal shape shifter and healer, travels to colonial America with another immortal named Doro. Their aims and origins are very different. Anyanwu wants to ...more

I really don't know where to start with this review. Wild Seed is unlike anything I have ever read before but yet it was still very accessible and easy to read. I would say this book is a combination of urban fantasy, horror, historical fiction and fantasy. Butler addresses slavery, gender roles, racial issues, sexuality, and class issues so subtlety you can miss the commentary if you want to and she does this all through the lens of a fantasy world involving supernatural beings that are seeming
...more

Oct 16, 2020
Christopher Paolini
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
favorites,
recommended
As close to a perfect book as I can imagine. There’s almost nothing that one could do to improve Butler’s prose, pacing, or characterization. She never gives you an excuse to not turn the page . . . which is why I read Wild Seed in a single sitting. The moral issues Butler addresses make for fascinating drama.
![[Name Redacted]](https://images.gr-assets.com/users/1347082397p2/287915.jpg)
Butler's sci-fi classic has so much to recommend it. She is a very talented writer, and she creates a mythology and cosmology which are, if not unique, then arguably the best-developed of their kind. "Wild Seed" is beautiful and lyrical and powerful, but the rampant misandry and peculiar romanticization of pre-colonial Africa mar it -- infect it like a virus.
There is neither subtlety nor nuance in Butler's representation of the two sexes. No woman is ever a criminal or a monster or a villain -- ...more
There is neither subtlety nor nuance in Butler's representation of the two sexes. No woman is ever a criminal or a monster or a villain -- ...more

blog | goodreads
And forever is a long time to endure one another w ...more
Most of us don't believe in gods and spirits and devils who must be pleased or feared. We have Doro, and he's enough.What can I say about Wild Seed that could come anywhere close to doing it justice? This is the story of how Doro met Anyanwu, the only living soul on Earth who could possibly match his will; test his patience, endure his passive cruelty, and time and again defy him in ways even she could not possibly understand.
And forever is a long time to endure one another w ...more

A great book, I can’t believe that I just discovered Octavia Butler this year. She has been one the gems that I have encountered while reading through the NPR list of classic science fiction and fantasy. This novel could easily be a stand-alone novel, but I was intrigued when I realized it was the first in a series—I will be very interested to see where Butler takes the story from here.
Although this is another book about extraordinarily long life, Butler examines it from a very different view po ...more
Although this is another book about extraordinarily long life, Butler examines it from a very different view po ...more

4.5/5
As Woolf once said Middlemarch is one of the few English books written for grown-ups, so too is this one of the few pieces of science fiction written for the real world, not marketing and academia. Of course, so chock full is this work with critical engagement and unflinching history that the cries of 'polemic' and 'bias' would not be an unlikely reaction. If that doesn't work, 'prosaic' could always be used as a strong condemnation via completely arbitrary standards of institutionalized re ...more
As Woolf once said Middlemarch is one of the few English books written for grown-ups, so too is this one of the few pieces of science fiction written for the real world, not marketing and academia. Of course, so chock full is this work with critical engagement and unflinching history that the cries of 'polemic' and 'bias' would not be an unlikely reaction. If that doesn't work, 'prosaic' could always be used as a strong condemnation via completely arbitrary standards of institutionalized re ...more

Wild Seed: Two African immortals battle for supremacy in early America
Originally posted at Fantasy Literature
Wild Seed (1980) was written last in Octavia Butler’s 5-book PATTERNIST series, but comes first in chronology. The next books by internal chronology are Mind of My Mind (1977), Clay’s Ark (1984), and Patternmaster (1976). Butler was later unsatisfied with Survivor (1978) and elected to not have it reprinted, so I will focus on the main 4 volumes. Wild Seed is an origin story set well befo ...more
Originally posted at Fantasy Literature
Wild Seed (1980) was written last in Octavia Butler’s 5-book PATTERNIST series, but comes first in chronology. The next books by internal chronology are Mind of My Mind (1977), Clay’s Ark (1984), and Patternmaster (1976). Butler was later unsatisfied with Survivor (1978) and elected to not have it reprinted, so I will focus on the main 4 volumes. Wild Seed is an origin story set well befo ...more

A+, her best (per me). Immortal body-shifter vs. shape-changer. Awesome book, based on West African legends and folktales, with a dose of Hollywood flash (she grew up in SoCal). This would be a great graphic novel. Or Marvel comic!
There's a long-term exhibit of her papers up at the Huntington. Almost worth braving the horrors of LA traffic. She gave them her stuff: https://www.huntington.org/verso/2018... Great leading photo!
Died way too young. RIP.
Notes for 2018 reread, in progress:
Currently re ...more
There's a long-term exhibit of her papers up at the Huntington. Almost worth braving the horrors of LA traffic. She gave them her stuff: https://www.huntington.org/verso/2018... Great leading photo!
Died way too young. RIP.
Notes for 2018 reread, in progress:
Currently re ...more

A unique fantasy novel that centers around supernatural/superhuman characters from Africa. The story begins in the time of slavery, when slaves were captured and brought to America. I found it to be a very unique and refreshing premise, compared to the common tropes of fantasy, be they paranormal or Tolkeinian.
The two central characters (and antagonists) were interesting personalities. One seems to represent the Earth Mother--the power of healing and nature and animals. The other seems to repres ...more
The two central characters (and antagonists) were interesting personalities. One seems to represent the Earth Mother--the power of healing and nature and animals. The other seems to repres ...more

This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.

Feb 29, 2008
Shannon (Giraffe Days)
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
2008,
speculative-fiction
My first foray into the unique world of Octavia Butler's imagination does not disappoint. Terrify, yes, and fascinate in an almost grotesque way, but it's oh so worth it. It is also a good example of speculative fiction and what you can do with it.
For over three thousand years Doro has wandered the Earth, gathering together those born special, with latent potential or abilities, usually mental, that can endanger themselves or others. Born human, Doro died during his own "transition" as a boy, ye ...more
For over three thousand years Doro has wandered the Earth, gathering together those born special, with latent potential or abilities, usually mental, that can endanger themselves or others. Born human, Doro died during his own "transition" as a boy, ye ...more

4.5 stars. How do I even begin to review this? I'm going to have to think on this for a few days. If you have Kindle Unlimited, do yourself a favor and read/listen to this book. If you don't, just buy it. Doro, a man who steals the bodies of others and uses the until he must find another or he feels he deserves the body of another person, finds Anyanwu in the African forests living alone on the fringes of a village as a old medicine woman. While searching for one of his lost groups of people, pe
...more

Anyanwu remains my most beloved literary character ever.I CAN NOT wait until this becomes a TV show🥰

Octavia Butler enchanted me again with this hundreds of years tale of a shapeshifter and a bodysnatcher. At first I thought this was SF, but then it became fantasy. Not that I mind since it was so engrossing. Strong characters and stories that invoked emotions, from wonder, sadness, anger, frustration and a little bit of hope. Same formula with her Parable novels, this one also has a great, tenacious female main character, who still had lots of love to share despite living in a cruel world with
...more

I’m not sure what Butler intended readers take away from this novel but I found it demeaning toward women and largely abhorrent.
The story focuses on two “people.” Doro is an evil shade thousands of years old who survives by jumping from body to body, killing the host, and absorbing the new body’s energy to survive until jumping to the next host at few week intervals. He has thus killed some hundred thousand people when this book begins.
His entertainment over the millennia is rounding up people w ...more
The story focuses on two “people.” Doro is an evil shade thousands of years old who survives by jumping from body to body, killing the host, and absorbing the new body’s energy to survive until jumping to the next host at few week intervals. He has thus killed some hundred thousand people when this book begins.
His entertainment over the millennia is rounding up people w ...more

This review is going to be hard, because Octavia Butler has a big reputation in the sci-fi world, and given that fact I had started this book in the series. But unfortunately this book was a huge disappointment, also I don't get as to how can I call this book sci-fi because although there were many people in this book with X-Men like abilities, but without a coherent story I just did not get the point of throwing them together.
The book has basically has two main characters with some side charact ...more
The book has basically has two main characters with some side charact ...more

May 10, 2007
Rona Fernandez
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
fantasy and sci-fi fans, women of color, history buffs
Shelves:
favorites
This is one of my favorite books ever, for its superb blending of atmosphere/landscape, characterization, politics, history, race/gender/sexuality, politics, and plot. Ms. Butler (may she rest in peace) created some of the most memorable characters in my mind in Doro and, of course, Anyanwu/Emma. I could read this book over and over. Just doing a text analysis of the opening 7 paragraphs is such an education to an aspiring novelist like me. Didn't like 'Mind of My Mind' as much, but wonder if an
...more

Jun 19, 2019
Dawn C
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
group-shelf,
6th-read-all-the-books-challenge
When you sob to an Octavia E. Butler story you know it was good.

Sep 13, 2020
Kristenelle
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
worlds-beyond-the-margins-challenge
Woot! This took us forever, haha! As I mentioned before, hubby and I have been listening to the Audible version of this book in the car since long before the pandemic started. So it is a little difficult for me to look back on the whole book and speak about it cohesively.
We have been listening to this series in the order that they were published. I would actually recommend chronological order, but my husband disagrees with me on that. Anyways, this one is chronologically the first one and it gi ...more
We have been listening to this series in the order that they were published. I would actually recommend chronological order, but my husband disagrees with me on that. Anyways, this one is chronologically the first one and it gi ...more

Nearly forgot to rate the first book in the series.
I read it after book 4 and 2, so it worked as a great prequel to the final social system that developed on earth in book 4, and it had the advantage that I didn't have to waste killing-thoughts about one of the protagonists, since I already learned their fate.
In this book we follow the several thousand year old Doro on his quest to breed a new human race. His determination and his complete dismissal of humans as individuals with their own right ...more
I read it after book 4 and 2, so it worked as a great prequel to the final social system that developed on earth in book 4, and it had the advantage that I didn't have to waste killing-thoughts about one of the protagonists, since I already learned their fate.
In this book we follow the several thousand year old Doro on his quest to breed a new human race. His determination and his complete dismissal of humans as individuals with their own right ...more

This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it,
click here.

Dec 01, 2010
Marvin
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
autographed,
science-fiction
Octavia E. Butler's women are incredibly strong characters. One of her themes is that people are either masters or slaves but occasionally there is a person who refuses to be either and that person becomes persecuted for their refusal to be labeled. The main protagonist of Wild Seed is one of those persons. She is a mutant who has lived 300 years, both feared and respected in her African tribe yet always living on the outside for her protection. She meets another non-human that is much older and
...more

Dec 25, 2009
Nicky
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
speculative-fiction
This book wasn't as good a match for my mood as N.K. Jemisin's The Hundred Thousand Kingdoms, but it didn't suffer for being read immediately after it. It's an interesting concept: a being that might as well be a god, moving from body to body, amoral and utterly self-serving, trying to breed others like him so he won't be alone, and a being who is also immortal, or close to it, nurturing families so she won't be alone. The two of them are entirely different: Anwanyu loves the people she finds an
...more

Oct 26, 2016
Sarah
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
audio,
sci-fi-fantasy-challenge-2016
I haven't figured out what to say about the book so I'll just say that the audio was well done. He had to account for Doro changing bodies and characters that were going up and down the age spectrum. He also had to do a number of accents since the book went from Nigeria to New Amsterdam to New York to New Orleans.
...more

Aug 13, 2017
David
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Recommends it for:
The X-Men, immortal shapeshifters who love immortal murderous bad boys who are totally not vampires
If you've ever wondered what the X-Men written by Octavia Butler would look like, this is that book.
There are no epic super-powered battles, of course, and the word "mutant" (nor any other four-colored neologism for superbeings) is never used. But Wild Seed is basically about two people born with superhuman powers (including immortality) being born centuries ago, discovering each other, and then trying to guide other "gifted" beings (most of them being their descendants) along very different pat ...more
There are no epic super-powered battles, of course, and the word "mutant" (nor any other four-colored neologism for superbeings) is never used. But Wild Seed is basically about two people born with superhuman powers (including immortality) being born centuries ago, discovering each other, and then trying to guide other "gifted" beings (most of them being their descendants) along very different pat ...more
topics | posts | views | last activity | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Feminist Science ...: Patternist--What order should it be read? | 3 | 38 | Nov 06, 2019 04:43PM | |
SciFi and Fantasy...: "Wild Seed" Full Discussion *spoilers* | 50 | 249 | Jun 17, 2019 03:48PM | |
Goodreads Librari...: Wild Seed (Patternmaster #1) by Octavia E. Butler | 4 | 20 | Nov 09, 2018 04:27PM |
Octavia Estelle Butler was an American science fiction writer, one of the best-known among the few African-American women in the field. She won both Hugo and Nebula awards. In 1995, she became the first science fiction writer to receive the MacArthur Foundation "Genius" Grant.
After her father died, Butler was raised by her widowed mother. Extremely shy as a child, Octavia found an outlet at the li ...more
After her father died, Butler was raised by her widowed mother. Extremely shy as a child, Octavia found an outlet at the li ...more
Other books in the series
Patternmaster
(4 books)
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