Parable of the Sower by Octavia Butler

One of the silver linings to the very strange pandemic year we've all lived through, 2020, was the Octavia Butler renaissance. People woke up to the fact that she was a brilliant writer, and her book "Parable of the Sower" shot to the top of bestseller lists. The book was eerily predictive for 2020, in a lot of ways. Kimberly shares her thoughts. Purchase your copy of Octavia Butler's prescient novel here: https://amzn.to/3qDzFbPThanks for listening. 💜🦉Watch our beautiful educational videos at https://www.socratica.com/Support our work at https://www.patreon.com/socratica or https://www.paypal.me/socraticaTRANSCRIPTWelcome everybody to Socratica Reads. My name is Kimberly Hatch Harrison, and I’m the co-founder of Socratica. We make futuristic learning videos. What do I mean by that? We teach math, science, and programming that will take you into the future. Your future. You may think you can’t see your future, but you can. Maybe not with perfect clarity, but you can LEARN to speculate in a powerful way. You NEED to envision your future, to know what you have to do to get there. Unless you’re okay just living your life like you’re floating in a river, being carried helplessly to some unknown destination. This is what I’m doing in this podcast. I’m focusing on what we read at Socratica that helps us think this way. It’s mainly science fiction. Sci Fi has an undeserved reputation as being lightweight reading, and Sci fi authors as being lightweight writers. As if just anyone could make up a picture of the future that is compelling, and possible, and internally consistent, and TRUE. I have enormous respect for Science Fiction writers. They have to capture the truth of our society, our technological capabilities, as well as our human psychology, and then they have to imagine what would happen to our society if something were tweaked. How would we respond as human beings. What would happen next. These people, these Science Fiction writers - there’s a certain wizardry to them, to be able to envision the future so well. You may really think Octavia Butler was psychic, if you’ve read Parable of the Sower, which she wrote in the early 90s. This book has surged in popularity this year, since we’ve been living in PandemicTime, because it captures so much of the strange collapse of normal life that we are experiencing. I feel a certain kinship with this author. Octavia Butler was born in Pasadena, like me. She was an only child of an impoverished family, like me. She LIVED at the library, like me. We were both determined to succeed. But she also saw a different side of Los Angeles that I did my best to avoid and turn a blind eye to. She was keenly aware of the frailties in the system, and she captured the frayed ends in her work. This book starts in Los Angeles in the 2020s. There’s been a sad slide of American society into disrepair and crime. It’s not completely spelled out, but you get the impression that the environment has suffered a radical change. It only rains once every six or seven years in LA, and water is a very expensive commodity. The main character lives in a kind of constant lockdown, in a gated community. Not because they’re wealthy - it’s just too dangerous to go outside. The kids haven’t gone out to school for years. Her father takes his life in his hands to go out to work. Fire is a constant threat. A lot of this feels like our year 2020. I’m going to read you a couple...

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Socratica is all about Lifelong Learning. And one of the best ways to keep learning is to READ. What should you read? Everything! Our co-founder Kimberly Hatch Harrison shares what we're reading at Socratica. Current theme: SCI-FI As Ray Bradbury once said,“Science fiction is the most important literature in the history of the world, because it's the history of ideas, the history of our civilization birthing itself. ...Science fiction is central to everything we've ever done, and people who make fun of science fiction writers don't know what they're talking about." Book List: Episode 1: Ray Bradbury's 100th Birthday All Summer in a Day (found in collection A Medicine for Melancholy) https://amzn.to/3aA3UK4 Episode 2: 2001: A Space Odyssey https://amzn.to/35RdGEX