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Parable of the Sower: A Novel Hardcover – February 28, 2017

4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 15,186 ratings

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A New York Times Book of the Year · Nebula Award nominee · Featuring an introduction by Gloria Steinem

From the pioneering New York Times bestselling science fiction author of Kindred.

The radically speculative odyssey of a young Black woman in a post-apocalyptic America and the community she cultivates despite the horrors of climate change and social inequality

The time is 2025. The place is California, where small, walled communities must protect themselves from hordes of desperate scavengers and roaming bands of people addicted to a drug that activates an orgasmic desire to burn, rape, and murder.

When one small community is overrun, Lauren Olamina, an 18-year-old Black woman with the hereditary train of "hyperempathy"—which causes her to feel others’ pain as her own—sets off on foot along the dangerous coastal highways, moving north into the unknown.

"All the Little Raindrops: A Novel" by Mia Sheridan for $10.39
The chilling story of the abduction of two teenagers, their escape, and the dark secrets that, years later, bring them back to the scene of the crime. | Learn more

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Gripping ... poignant ... succeeds on multiple levels." The New York Times Book Review

"Literate ... thoughtful. And a real gut-wrencher."
Washington Post Book World

"A powerful story of hope and faith in the midst of urban violence and decay ... Excellent science fiction and a parable of modern society." 
Denver Post

"A prophetic odyssey." 
—Essence

"Simple, direct, and deeply felt." 
Library Journal

"Artfully conceived and elegantly written." 
Cleveland Plain Dealer

"There isn't a page in this vivid and frightening story that fails to grip the reader." 
San Jose Mercury News

About the Author

A writer who darkly imagined the future we have destined for ourselves in book after book, and also one who has shown us the way toward improving on that dismal fate, OCTAVIA E. BUTLER (1947–2006) is recognized as among the bravest and smartest of contemporary fiction writers. A 1995 MacArthur Award winner, Butler transcended the science fiction category even as she was awarded that community’s top prizes, the Nebula and Hugo Awards. She reached readers of all ages, all races, and all religious and sexual persuasions. For years the only African-American woman writing science fiction, Butler has encouraged many others to follow in her path.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Seven Stories Press (February 28, 2017)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 336 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1609807197
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1609807191
  • Reading age ‏ : ‎ 1 year and up
  • Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 710L
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.06 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.6 x 1.2 x 8.5 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.6 4.6 out of 5 stars 15,186 ratings

About the author

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Octavia E. Butler
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OCTAVIA E. BUTLER (1947–2006) was the renowned author of numerous ground-breaking novels, including Kindred, Wild Seed, and Parable of the Sower. Recipient of the Locus, Hugo and Nebula awards, and a PEN Lifetime Achievement Award for her body of work, in 1995 she became the first science- fiction writer to receive the MacArthur Fellowship ‘Genius Grant’. A pioneer of her genre, Octavia’s dystopian novels explore myriad themes of Black injustice, women’s rights, global warming and political disparity, and her work is taught in over two hundred colleges and universities nationwide.

Customer reviews

4.6 out of 5 stars
4.6 out of 5
15,186 global ratings

Customers say

Customers find the characters rich and compelling. They also describe the plot as believable, unique, and current. Readers find the message thought-provoking and scarily reminiscent of today’s society. Opinions are mixed on the disturbing content, with some finding it frightening and harsh while others say it's graphic. Customers also disagree on the emotion, with others finding it poignant and stirring while others find it unrelentingly depressing.

AI-generated from the text of customer reviews

190 customers mention "Plot"136 positive54 negative

Customers find the plot believable, realistic, and possible. They also say it's entertaining with good action and drama. Customers also say the author has an uncanny way of capturing our current times and has a lot of twists and turns.

"...has the potential to have hundreds of followers, all because it is comforting and simple...." Read more

"...As I said, the book was exciting, but the climax was rather disappointing...." Read more

"...And “God is Power- infinite, irresistible, inexorable, indifferent. And yet, God is Pliable- trickster, teacher, chaos, clay...." Read more

"...I'm glad this isn't a stand-alone book because the ending leaves a lot to be desired since there's really no resolution regarding what happens to..." Read more

142 customers mention "Writing style"111 positive31 negative

Customers find the writing style well written, with verses that make sense. They also say the book is fast paced.

"...Thoroughly enjoyable and well written. Butler has amazing foresight...." Read more

"Octavia Butler is a sci fi writer of the highest order. At once poetic and prophetic, her work becomes frightening when considering the dystopia in..." Read more

"...Olivia Butler has written a dystopia that is believable, harsh, and well written. I could really see this happening in our country...." Read more

"...It was work to read through and multiple attempts at listening to it put me to sleep...." Read more

139 customers mention "Message"125 positive14 negative

Customers find the message in the book very thought-provoking, expanding their view on religion. They also say the setting is interesting, innovative, powerful, and provides a first-person view to a dystopian world. Readers also mention the religious undertone was present but not abrasive.

"...Religion is an interesting topic in any book, especially so in this one, as our character has spread the seeds for her own religion to take root,..." Read more

"...The book completely expanded my view on religion, countless questions made me stop reading, and ponder the questions...." Read more

"...The religious undertone was present but not abrasive, and focused more on religion as a general concept...." Read more

"...The most impressive part was the depth of thought and complexity of characters. I can’t stop thinking about any of it." Read more

66 customers mention "Characters"58 positive8 negative

Customers find the characters rich, compelling, and inspiring. They also appreciate the honest narrative voice.

"...The most impressive part was the depth of thought and complexity of characters. I can’t stop thinking about any of it." Read more

"...It’s full of love, suspense, heroism, and religion in a dystopian world...." Read more

"...Parable of the Sower is very smartly written with a plot filled with characters you connect with...." Read more

"...But, again, what makes this book come alive is the incredible honest narrative voice." Read more

14 customers mention "Author"14 positive0 negative

Customers find the author talented, genius, and brilliant. They also say the book is well developed and deep.

"The writing and characters were outstanding. . .well developed and deep...." Read more

"...Overall though this book is very impressive considering when it was written, and important for the representation it gives." Read more

"...I love her books! Rest in heaven Ms. Butler, your talent is amazing. Gone too soon." Read more

"...I still give it four stars because the world is very well done. It would be a good setting for derivative stories and/or role-playing games." Read more

14 customers mention "Comprehensibility"11 positive3 negative

Customers find the book easy to read and captivating. They also say the philosophy is easy to fall into and explore throughout the book.

"...to have hundreds of followers, all because it is comforting and simple...." Read more

"...improbable set of events to unfold and it's all too easy to accept and believe...." Read more

"...That said, it is brilliant, simple, and well worth the time." Read more

"...The book was rushed and unorganized at some parts, leading to many unanswered questions...." Read more

65 customers mention "Disturbing content"43 positive22 negative

Customers are mixed about the disturbing content. Some find the book frightening, disturbing in many ways, and apocalyptic in a sense. They also say it's an important commentary on the increasing violence and dehumanization that's happening in the world. However, some customers find the content triggering and graphic at times.

"...I warn you, Olivia Butler has written a dystopia that is believable, harsh, and well written. I could really see this happening in our country...." Read more

"...Have read and also listened to the audio book. It was very provocative. READ IT!!" Read more

"...But it’s still creepy. Not going to lie...." Read more

"...The book and it's sequel are well written and thought out. The book is disturbing as it requires no particular improbable set of events to unfold..." Read more

46 customers mention "Emotion"30 positive16 negative

Customers are mixed about the emotion in the book. Some find it poignant, stirring, funny, sad, and insightful. They also appreciate, admire, and compassion for the characters. Others however, find the book tragic, chilling, and depressing.

"...They are also both hyper-empathetic, just like our narrator...." Read more

"an interesting but rather depressing view of the future, overlaid with a hopeful philosophy that doesn't seem to jive with the story too well." Read more

"...And “God is Power- infinite, irresistible, inexorable, indifferent. And yet, God is Pliable- trickster, teacher, chaos, clay...." Read more

"Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler is a tragic and chilling look at what could very well be the near future...." Read more

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Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on May 1, 2015
The Parable of the Sower is a wonderfully constructed vision of the world following a climate related collapse of western society. I mean wonderful in the sense that this world that Octavia Butler has brought to life inspired in me a genuine sense of wonder. Sci-fi books are supposed to create in the reader a sense of disbelief, a longing for the future and what could come with it, and this book did exactly that, while at the same time attacking and conquering huge themes like religion and racism. Racism in particular is a theme that I would like to spend quite a bit of time addressing, but religion is also something that I will touch on in some detail. There are a variety of other details and issues that could be addressed, but these are the two that stuck out to me like a sore thumb, and also the two that I was most interested in writing about. This book was excellent, compelling, and definitely worth more than one read.

The story that Octavia Butler tells is a compelling story of survival and community. The opening of the book starts en medias res, exactly as a good futuristic novel can. I personally feel that telling too much of a back-story can destroy the reader’s ability to concoct one itself, it also takes away from the author’s ability to create suspense and mystery in the novel itself. Butler does a very good job of giving us a gripping story without boring us with the details of the failing of the society that once existed. It is very easy to take on the mindset of a young girl while reading, and that makes digesting all of the new and sometimes confusing information much more easily. The novel then goes on to talk about the sense of community that is felt in the walled “neighborhood” that Lauren, the main character and narrator, lives in. This neighborhood seems to be a well-oiled machine, despite the immediately apparent racial tensions to be found inside of the community. There is a division among the white members of the community and the other racial groups. This makes a lot of sense considering the racial tensions that exist even in the world today, but it was interesting to see that Butler does not envision a post-racial world for our future.

One of the bigger themes of this book is “new slavery”; I put this in quotes only because I believe it to be a coined term and not merely an expression that I have made up. “New slavery” was introduced around the same time, as prisons became an industry rather than a place of reform. Butler speaks of this issue in a speech she gave which is the secondary reading for this week, “Every now and then you hear– and I’m not talking about ante-bellum slavery but modern-day slavery–every now and then you hear about some group of homeless people or illegal aliens or other people who have been held in slavery and I sort of combined slavery and throw-away workers and prison problems because in Parable of the Sower there is slavery and it is entirely legal because it isn’t called “slavery.” This quote speaks to her inclusion of the “new slavery” in her novel. This kind of slavery is found encapsulated in the city of Olivar, the fictional city being built where “skilled” workers are needed. The characters in the novel fear that this city is merely an excuse to capture people and indenture them to the larger corporate structure. This is a frightening reality because it is not unrealistic. There are certainly places in this dystopian America where slaves are found. They are people who do not have money and then work for company credit, but they never make quite enough money to afford their living expenses, so they become indebted to the company they work for, and end up owing the company massive amounts of money, and passing that on to their children when they die, creating a system of debt slavery that persists indefinitely.

Butler definitely set out to make this a main feature in her book, but what is interesting is that the people of color in the novel feel that the city of Olivar would only want white workers. This is interesting because for as taught as the racial tensions are in the future, there does not seem to be hope for anyone who did not already have money when the country collapsed. Some people are simply “slightly better off”.

The effects of this “new slavery” can be found in the people that the characters meet later on in the story; some of the people who they run into like Emery and Tori. They are both escaped slaves who are now dealing with the consequences of living a slave’s existence. They are also both hyper-empathetic, just like our narrator. This means that not only can they see someone in pain and relate, but also they actually feel it, and it is considered to be debilitating. Our narrator does not like to share with people that she has this condition, but she notices that the newer members of the group share her condition and immediately bonds with them over it. This hyper-empathy is a big reason why Lauren makes such an interesting character, because it shows how painful killing is for her, and how everything she does has a reason, and also is in part why she founds her religion, Earthseed.

Religion is an interesting topic in any book, especially so in this one, as our character has spread the seeds for her own religion to take root, Earthseed. Earthseed is a new religion that has some elements of a bunch of already existing belief systems worked into it. The basic idea of Earthseed is that “the destiny of mankind is to take root amongst the stars,” this is interesting because it is both a spiritual philosophy, and a very real belief of the narrator. Lauren believes that the discontinuation of the space program is foolish, and that they should abandon the Earth and that they should try again somewhere else.

Earthseed fascinates me, and I think I know where it stems from. Lauren lives in a firmly Baptist community, but does not have the faith of her father. Earthseed is a comfort to Lauren, and it is that simple. It is a basic philosophy that has sprung out of her discomfort with the world around her. She is living in a virtual hell, and has had to come up with some way to make her own truth. The truth she chooses to believe rather than a truth that is told to her. This is exactly where all religion stems from. People as a whole would not believe in something and it was not comforting to them. This is why I think the theme of religion is so interesting a Cli-fi book. With or without realizing it, Octavia Butler has created a wonderful comparison between a religion founded by an 18 year old, and hundreds of thousands of scientists’ conclusive evidence that climate change is very, very real. In the secondary reading Butler quotes a cartoon, the interesting part was this, “Make up your own truth and stick to it, no matter how little sense it makes. And sooner or later, you’ll have converts. Trust me.” This rings the truth to me about the world in general. People are so much more likely to believe in and idealize something that comforts them, rather than something that tells them they need to change. This is the whole fundamental issue we have had with the class. Our big question, “what can we do?” is answered by this simple quote. We need to make up a truth that people want to believe in, we cannot keep throwing the discomforting truth in their faces or they will continue to believe their own truths, namely “there is nothing that I can do.” Octavia Butler draws a comparison between a people who are still in disbelief about how broken their world is, and their deep belief that things will return to what they once were. This is a constant theme throughout the beginning of the book. Instead, a new religion is formed, which has the potential to have hundreds of followers, all because it is comforting and simple. This struck me as genius, and I may be reading a little too deeply, but I gleamed from Butler’s speech that this may have been on purpose. I liked that in particular about this book.

The Parable of the Sower has struck me in a way that a lot of books have not. I do not however think that this book will make waves in the ocean of denial surrounding climate change. I don’t think that the book deals closely enough with what we, as a species, have done to destroy the planet, and therefore keeps us from feeling particularly guilty. This book is rather a story about survival, friendship, and faith. I liked it immensely and would even consider adding it to my course syllabus when I am finally a teacher rather than a student.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 28, 2024
After seeing this book mentioned in an article, I decided to read it. Octavia Butler writes an enthralling work of fiction that is spot on as to the future to where the United States is heading. Thoroughly enjoyable and well written. Butler has amazing foresight. What's more, this book also contains something that few will notice, or even realize: That the world in which Butler, and I, came from was a very brief period in U.S. history... post-Civil Rights, yet pre-Woke. A world where race was truly secondary to the human condition, and Butler inadvertently (maybe not) captures this wonderful world. Even though her fictional world of the future is crumbling, race was not an issue, nor an obsession. (That stated, you can skip the foreword and its author, N.K. Jemison... as she cannot claim to even understand, admit, or acknowledge this.) Great book. Highly recommended.
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Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2022
This is a must-read book. The book revolves around global change, inflation, and economic crises, and how the world was driven into chaos. It efficiently uses these problems to construct a magical story. Every page was thrilling and contained immense information. Lauren's story with hyper empathy gives perfect contrast as she lives in a world full of pain and destruction. When reading the book’s synopsis, this is exactly what caught my attention. How would she survive in the outside this condition? The book completely expanded my view on religion, countless questions made me stop reading, and ponder the questions. Octavia E. Butler asked great questions to the readers, the perspective of religion she gave Lauren (the main character) is one I’ve never seen before. The book has a great emphasis on race and prestige. The best chance of surviving is if you are white and rich enough to have a stable home in a walled community. The book did a great job keeping the reader interested in what’s happening, ranging from Lauren’s passionate ideologies about religion to the twists and turning points of the story. The book changes the reader's perspectives on religious and political ideas. Most importantly, the imagery the author provided was mystical. I could picture what I was reading in great detail on every page. Pain, blood, and rape were the biggest components of this story besides religion. And any reader could picture the bodies Butler was describing.
As I said, the book was exciting, but the climax was rather disappointing. The peak of the book was in the center of the story, and it eventually took a dip down. I also disliked how many characters were involved in the story. Some of them don’t add much to the book either, it was a pain trying to remember who was who and trying to keep up with the constant introductions. I found myself turning back and trying to figure out who was who. Apart from this, this is a perfect novel. If you have the chance, please buy it, I guarantee you have never read such an intriguing book.
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Top reviews from other countries

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Maia
5.0 out of 5 stars Meu primeiro contato com Octavia Butler
Reviewed in Brazil on October 19, 2023
Em tempos de fim de mundo, esse livro me abraçou quando precisei, e me chacoalhou pra vida! Escrita profunda, desafiadoramente filosófica, Octavia já tinha previsto o que estamos vivendo em 2023 há 30 anos.
Recomendo se você tem tempo, paciência e curiosidade em compreender a história. Ela pode parecer um pouco lenta pra quem está acostumado com jornadas de herói épicas para salvar o mundo, encontrar a cura, etc. Não é pra salvar o mundo, é pra salvar a nós mesmos.
Mal posso esperar pra ler o próximo, comprei em inglês pra treinar a língua e foi uma ótima decisão! Tive dificuldade com uma palavra ou outra, mas no geral é tranquilo de compreender se você já tem um domínio básico.
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Maia
5.0 out of 5 stars Meu primeiro contato com Octavia Butler
Reviewed in Brazil on October 19, 2023
Em tempos de fim de mundo, esse livro me abraçou quando precisei, e me chacoalhou pra vida! Escrita profunda, desafiadoramente filosófica, Octavia já tinha previsto o que estamos vivendo em 2023 há 30 anos.
Recomendo se você tem tempo, paciência e curiosidade em compreender a história. Ela pode parecer um pouco lenta pra quem está acostumado com jornadas de herói épicas para salvar o mundo, encontrar a cura, etc. Não é pra salvar o mundo, é pra salvar a nós mesmos.
Mal posso esperar pra ler o próximo, comprei em inglês pra treinar a língua e foi uma ótima decisão! Tive dificuldade com uma palavra ou outra, mas no geral é tranquilo de compreender se você já tem um domínio básico.
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Sarah
5.0 out of 5 stars Incredible
Reviewed in Canada on July 22, 2023
I am flying through this book. I highly recommend it.
CP
5.0 out of 5 stars An extrordinary book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 2, 2023
this book was written in the early 80's in the form of a diary. it is a very easy read, but of a harrowing vision of the future where clean drinking water has a value that can lead to murder in order to get it. It is a view of a future that has climate change at its centre and corruption at its core. it is a struggle for survival within a world that has become savage, a world where survival means having a gun and those without are powerless to those who have power. it is a corrupt world that is described. the second book in this series (written in the early 90's) has a US politician who seeks election to 'Make America Great Again'...
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stan
4.0 out of 5 stars très intrigant et réussi
Reviewed in France on March 22, 2023
Sur une recommandation d'un ami, j'ai lu ce livre (peu commenté en France, semble-t-il), qui commence comme une dystopie avant d'évoluer vers des développements d'ordre plus spirituel tout aussi passionnants
Silvio
4.0 out of 5 stars Good quality
Reviewed in the Netherlands on March 19, 2022
No complaints.