Parable of the Sower
Photo of Matthew Royal

Matthew Royal &
Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler

Edition
ISBN 9780446675505

Reviews

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Hardy Clervil@hcler
4.5 stars
Jan 30, 2025

Eerily prescient. Bleak, yet beautiful hopeful.

+3
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Neil Chin@neilio98
5 stars
Jan 28, 2025

Such a beautiful read. Sadly quite prescient.

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Dave Goldsmith@davegoldsmith
4 stars
Jan 2, 2025

Helpful heading into 2025.

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Alli@maybeitsalli
5 stars
Dec 29, 2024

A harrowing, yet hopeful dystopian novel that follows a young woman as she navigates a dying world in the chaos of global climate change and economic crises.

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Nik ✨@nixter
2 stars
Dec 12, 2024

Sigh. This is the third Octavia Butler book I’ve read, and I think it’s my final. I was very excited to read this because of how renowned it seems to be, and while I appreciate Butler’s undeniable contributions to sci-fi — especially those written by bipoc authors — this just doesn’t hold up to me in 2024 the way I’d hoped.


I was really intrigued at the beginning and thought I’d get to see the main character’s attempts at survival in this dystopian world. However, the focus of the story shifted like three times. I won’t give spoilers, but just know, that’s NOT what the story was about.


On top of that, I found the narrator annoying. She supposedly has this empathic superpower, which is ironic because she had ZERO emotions throughout the story. She was boring and very monotone. The book is a collection of her journal articles, so while I understand that her character was taught to control her extreme emotions in this volatile world, I would’ve thought she could emote in her writing. She didn’t.


Additionally, none of the background characters stood out or brought anything interesting to the story. They were pretty much interchangeable. The only person that seemed to have any depth was her father.


I don’t have much else to say outside of reiterating my disappointment. It wasn’t fun. The content was barely there and then altered multiple times. The characters sucked. It’s a 2 star instead of a 1 because I made it about 35% into the book fully interested in what was going on.

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jj@pffffft_no
4.5 stars
Nov 21, 2024

beautifully written, but so harrowing.

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Naomi J.@naomij
4.5 stars
Oct 16, 2024

Beautiful and oddly reflective for an apocalypse story. The first half might be a challenge if you’re having an existential crisis about the end of the world. The second half will give you hope. I’ll be reading the sequel.

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Kierce@kierce
4.5 stars
Sep 30, 2024

Brilliant! Great musings on religion/ capitalism/ humanity, great writing, interesting characters

+3
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nailah@lolnailah
3 stars
Aug 31, 2024

hard to get through at the beginning, but towards the middle it was more engaging. not much to look forward to, can’t say i enjoy science fiction or fiction that parallels the real world in such an artificial way, but i couldn’t help but realize that the fiction of this book is a reality for people from other parts of the world.

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Chris Dailey@cris_dali
4 stars
Jul 7, 2024

Dystopian future where the climate has ravaged civilization to the point where water, fresh food and personal security are daily struggles. Told through the eyes of a young woman with the (dis)ability to feel others' pain and pleasure. The daughter of a preacher and her family lives outside of LA in a community that is well off - in the sense that they are walled off from the homeless hordes of poor and violent. Focused on family, community, and tribalism, the novel also touches religion (new and old), capitalism, the climate and humanity's self-destruction.

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Mat Connor@mconnor
3 stars
Jun 25, 2024

I wanted to like this much more than I did. You have to respect Octavia Butler's imagination and prescience. This novel was first published in 1993 and describes the United States in 2024: Society is falling apart due to climate change, inequality, and water shortages. This is a dystopian vision that feels scarily realistic. In my opinion, there were two major issues with this book. 1. The main character (Lauren) suffers from an imaginary disease called "hyperempathy", a condition where a person physically feels the pleasure and pain of others, but Butler makes the curious decision to portray her as completely flat and unemotional. Lauren is constantly reminding us about her debilitating empathic condition but recites terrible events like murder and rape as if she were an unfeeling robot. It would be like if an unfunny person was constantly telling you that people found them hilarious or a boring person talking about all the people who find them charming. 2. This is an epistolary novel, told through Lauren's Journal entries, and the format saps most of the tension out of this novel. There are great epistolary novels (Frankenstein, Carrie, Augustus by John Williams), but Lauren's flat journal entries made this a tedious read. I'm not going to give up on Octavia Butler though. I still have copies of Kindred and Dawn I plan to get to. But based on the expectations I had going in, this was my most disappointing read of 2023.

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Liyah 🤎@aallen1019
5 stars
Jun 17, 2024

Not that Octavia Butler Needs my cosign but I enjoyed Parable of the Sower more than I thought I would. One of the few books/authors to actually live up to the hype. I was reading this for my thesis but I'm going to read the second book two just because I'm really invested now. The groundedness is almost eerie and it feels so full of history even though its set in the future.

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lala@polijus
4 stars
Jun 3, 2024

Okay. I’m a bit ashamed that this is the first time i read Octavia E. Butler’s works. But i just had the opportunity to find a physical copy of hers. So here goes. Parable of the Sower tells of a dystopian world where USA is basically a lawless land where people starve, are poor, and in need of shelter. People have to have their guards on even at home. This book tells the story of Lauren, whose father is a pastor and a lecturer, and whose stepmom runs a school for the neighbourhood she lives in. Lauren lives in a fenced neighbourhood where people outside, who doesn’t have a home and are poor is kept at bay. The world as depicted in the book has also a drug problem— the drug, called pyro, when it’s taken, it makes the user wants to commit arson, and feel a sense of enjoyment watching the fire. This book takes us to Lauren’s journey in navigating her life in this world— in hope for a better lives. At first I was kinda bored because it takes a long time for things to actually happen. By my estimation it takes roughly halfway to where things get to be interesting. But even for a while, we get to learn Lauren’s thoughts— her persona, her way of thinking, her plans, etc. Also, whilst she’s surviving, she is also building a new religion called Earthseed, and we get to see how she begins this. This was an interesting dystopian world. My only protest is why does Lauren’s love interest must be 39 years older than her?!?! It’s a bit creepy 😮‍💨

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elizabeth@ekmclaren
3 stars
May 11, 2024

The cycle of violence followed by religious introspection loses power as the plot treads water and the central conflict becomes muddled. But the world Butler imagines is compelling and prescient. I hope this is a just-okay book in a really fantastic series.

+1
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Sonia Grgas@sg911911
5 stars
Feb 23, 2024

This book was published 1/1/2000 and if you told me it was published just yesterday i would believe you. The story feels as if it could happen in the very near future if we are not careful. Sobering yet somehow hopeful. 4.5

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Emma Cragg@ekcragg
5 stars
Feb 10, 2024

I can’t (yet) describe the impact this book has had on me over the past couple of weeks, but what I do know is I’m not ready to let it go.

+2
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amy w@aimeamie
5 stars
Jan 28, 2024

Reminds me of Mary Doris Russell’s “The Sparrow”. Ties religion in with humanity and distills it to find people’s core essence. Great read for anyone who enjoys the metafictional introspective book.

+4
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Sarah Henry@henrywhosaralou
4 stars
Jan 6, 2024

A little long winded at times which made it hard to come back to after stepping away. Worth reading. I'm glad I finally finished it, even though it was too easy for me to put it down. The message is poignant. Didn't get much science fiction from the story.

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Laura Hilliger@laurahilliger
3.5 stars
Dec 21, 2023

Eerily similar to The Road but also completely different.

This review contains a spoiler
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jennifer @booksvirgo
5 stars
Dec 18, 2023

God is change. the most unsettled i’ve ever felt reading so far. It was so hard just reading horrific event after horrific event. Never felt like anyone could catch a break until the end which felt like a sigh of relief. But nothing felt outrageous and everything made sense. Truly a startling picture of the horrors of complacency. very vivid and plays out like a movie so without analysis it’s still engaging. But it was super interesting to read about how people define God during crisis. And this book wove Marxism very well without directly defining it and rubbing it in ur face. gonna have to analyze this for class so let me not give turnitin more material ✌️

Photo of Lisa Lindquist
Lisa Lindquist @lisalindquist
3 stars
Jul 12, 2023

3.5/5

Photo of MK
MK@easyfriday
4.5 stars
Jul 7, 2023

Great book. Some superfluous storylines that left me a bit unsatisfied. Maybe it was meant to have sequels? Smart read regardless. Wish it was longer

+6
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Joy Bush@aische
5 stars
Jul 5, 2023

It's like a prophecy book, written in 1993 but takes place in 2024-2027. So many quotes that sound like what we are going through now, how life will be in the near future. Everyone should read this!

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ren corr@ladybugcorr
5 stars
Jun 25, 2023

Don’t have all the words quite yet…. there were sooooo many gems and lessons in this. I won’t soon forget any of them.

+3

Highlights

Photo of Alli
Alli@maybeitsalli

All that you touch, You Change.

All that you change, Changes you.

The only lasting truth is change.

God is change.

Page 79
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Imogen@smimogen

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