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What Members Thought

Deceptively simple prose, a wide and complicated spanning of human emotions, and time travel that feels almost natural. I can't believe this book was written in 1979.
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This book... I never would have read it on my own but I’m so glad it got picked for my postal book club. It was heartbreaking and crazy and devastatingly sad and so, so intense. It was hard to put down because I wanted to know what happened next, but at the same time hard to read because what was happening was so awful and what was coming was bound to be worse. It is an important book - such perspective on what we think of as normal and human and how quickly that can change when faced with somet
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The magical realism of this book made the antebellum South seem more grotesque somehow. I loved how Butler didn't explain how Dana goes back and forth in time; she trusts her readers to suspend their disbelief and doesn't bore us with over technological heavy handed explaining. The characterization was complex. I loved it!
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Jun 06, 2016
Mary
rated it
really liked it
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
format-audio,
summer-bingo-2016
Summer 2016 Bingo - a slave narrative.
I first heard about this book on Bookriot's Get Booked podcast - time travel/sci-fi, slave narrative and an early book from Octavia E. Butler. I put it on my to-read list and was happy to find "A slave narrative" on my bingo card this year. The book did not disappoint. Butler crafted a great story; I love how she connected the two time periods (and I get why the connection had to be so violent, but I wish it hadn't had to be) and brought humanity into each ...more
I first heard about this book on Bookriot's Get Booked podcast - time travel/sci-fi, slave narrative and an early book from Octavia E. Butler. I put it on my to-read list and was happy to find "A slave narrative" on my bingo card this year. The book did not disappoint. Butler crafted a great story; I love how she connected the two time periods (and I get why the connection had to be so violent, but I wish it hadn't had to be) and brought humanity into each ...more

Apr 05, 2018
Adjrun
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
favorites,
fantasy-and-sci-fi
Brilliant and brutal and heartbreaking and complex.
It’s not really science fiction - maybe there was nothing else to call it when it was published in 1979. It uses time travel to contrast a black woman from the 1970s with her ancestors in the South in 1815.
It’s astoundingly modern for being 40 years old. It asks questions about power and race and gender and privilege. And key to it’s themes are that everyone - both in the past and today - bear the scars and damage from America’s past slavery.
It’s not really science fiction - maybe there was nothing else to call it when it was published in 1979. It uses time travel to contrast a black woman from the 1970s with her ancestors in the South in 1815.
It’s astoundingly modern for being 40 years old. It asks questions about power and race and gender and privilege. And key to it’s themes are that everyone - both in the past and today - bear the scars and damage from America’s past slavery.

Kindred is a rare mix of a book - historical fiction and science fiction - and was also a mix when it came to results. Given the option, I would have rated this book 2 1/2 stars. While I was interested in the concept and even the plot (3 stars), the writing was flat and uninspiring (2 stars).
Kindred follows Dana, a young African American woman living in California in 1976. Early in the book - and throughout its course - Dana is transported back to early nineteenth century Maryland. After a coupl ...more
Kindred follows Dana, a young African American woman living in California in 1976. Early in the book - and throughout its course - Dana is transported back to early nineteenth century Maryland. After a coupl ...more

Incredible
How do you even process something this powerful? The story is amazing itself, but Butler's characters are so intensely complex that the novel it is agonizing in the best way. The novel tears and rebuilds hope within moments.
The narrator of the Audio, Kim Staunton, was wonderful. She perfectly voiced Butler's writing. This was also my first whisper sync experience, which was actually pretty cool. ...more
How do you even process something this powerful? The story is amazing itself, but Butler's characters are so intensely complex that the novel it is agonizing in the best way. The novel tears and rebuilds hope within moments.
The narrator of the Audio, Kim Staunton, was wonderful. She perfectly voiced Butler's writing. This was also my first whisper sync experience, which was actually pretty cool. ...more

The science fiction-ness of this book was not front and center, but that was OK. The historical fiction-ness was on point. Given the current climate of our nation, it was also extra meaningful to me. There were some pretty brutal scenes, but I'd think slave life was pretty brutal. I'm glad it wasn't too glossed-over. I also think the main character's psychological and emotional journey was pretty thought-provoking. I would almost say this should be a high-school book...maybe college...I think I
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Feb 23, 2017
Sarah left GR
rated it
it was ok
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
ebooks,
read-harder-2017
For challenge #17 of the 2017 Read Harder Challenge: Read a classic by an author of color.
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May 31, 2015
Claire Jefferies
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
check-it-out

Jan 30, 2016
Sophie Brookover
marked it as to-read
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
fantasy,
2016-to-read

May 05, 2017
Caitlin H
rated it
it was amazing
·
review of another edition
Shelves:
favorites,
2017-favorites
