18 January 2026

Parable of the Sower

                      PARABLE OF THE SOWER

Octavia Butler

Books for Bigots


Now here is a book for just about any Bigot.  The end of civilization, the search for a new Jerusalem, violence, mayhem, rape, cannablism, simple survival in a society gone berserk.  One major difficulty may be, though, that our narrator, leader, and guiding prophet is an eighteen year old - - black, and female. The realization is not immediate however, possibly giving the reader enough time to get involved in the story that it can be read through without too much disgruntlement.


Lauren Olamina, unfortunately, has a name that is obviously not Anglo-Saxon. Germanic, or Nordic in origin which I know will be off-putting to many Bigots.  Lauren has created Earthseed:  The Book of the Living.  One caption pretty well captures the sense of the book:  "In order to rise from the ashes, a Phoenix must first burn".  America, in this book, is definitely burning and clearly gone with no semblance of current, everyday life, as we know it.


It is difficult to give a good sense of the book in 500 words.  It is a book that sticks with you after you have finished it.  It makes an impression; you remember events and characters, landscape and the events.  It's not Pamela.  Civilization, as we know it, for most of the population is over.  If you can't steal or salvage you starve.  If you have anything of value, you are killed for it.  It is a survival story with most not surviving.


Another issue with which a reading Bigot will face is Lauen's view of God.  To her, God is Change - - that is all, that's it.  This is a somewhat odd view of the deity, if one can call 'change' a deity.  One's first impression is that the author,  Ms. Butler, has a rather unorthodox view of what might be considered a deity.  Although if one thinks about it, which most Bigots will not, the idea is not far from what we consider to be God anyway. 


If you are of the opinion that God is the cause of everything - - the creator whether currently actively engaged or simply the entity that set everything in motion, you are, in effect, of the opinion that all change is the result of God's actions, and is, therefore, his embodiment.  God is the creator of the world and everything in it and it keeps operating according to his plan and will presumably continue to do so.  It really is not a very long leap to say that "God is Change" then.


I will have to conclude however, that most Bigots do not have the inclination nor the ability to analyze what they read in any meaningful way.  The PARABLE OF THE SOWER, would more than likely keep the attention of the average BIGOT and could be read to the end simply to find out what happens to the characters picked up on the trek to a new life, at a place called Acorn.  It's a pretty good story and one that a reader including BIGOTS can get involved in.


Richard E H Phelps II

Mingo

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