Regina's Reviews > Wild Seed

Wild Seed by Octavia E. Butler
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I really don't know where to start with this review. Wild Seed is unlike anything I have ever read before but yet it was still very accessible and easy to read. I would say this book is a combination of urban fantasy, horror, historical fiction and fantasy. Butler addresses slavery, gender roles, racial issues, sexuality, and class issues so subtlety you can miss the commentary if you want to and she does this all through the lens of a fantasy world involving supernatural beings that are seemingly immortal and have various abilities from shape shifting, body snatching, mind reading, and telekinesis. Personally, I don't want to miss the commentary and I enjoy the unique view. I tend to like my urban fantasy and fantasy stories with a slice of heaviness on the side and Octavia Butler seems to be able to deliver that every time.

This is the third book by Octavia Butler that I have read. I have come to expect that in reading her books I will have an escape from reality and a complete immersion into the characters that she writes. She writes characters that seem to breathe and live somewhere off the pages of her books, they are real and three dimensional. But such tangible characters come with a price, there is pain and anguish in her books and as a reader, I felt these emotions. Wild Seed was no exception. The characters witness some painful and sad events. This is not urban fantasy lite.

Wild Seed is a sweeping historical story that begins in Africa with ancient powerful beings. These beings get caught up in the slave trade and arrive in the now United States. These characters seem to have limitless power. One being prefers to use her power morally and compassionately. Another being, no longer sees himself as human and is not governed by any morality. And of course they clash, both romantically and otherwise. The book is surprisingly sexual in parts and raises some really interesting questions. A shapeshifter that can take on any shape -- animal and human -- and gender -- how do you feel about it taking on the opposite gender and engaging in sexual relationships? What about while it is in animal form? The sex scenes are not explicit but they are referenced. Octavia Butler is not shy about putting her toe across the border of most people's comfort zones.

I plan to continue on with the series and am excited that Butler's books are being published in e-book and audio book format.

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Reading Progress

July 4, 2012 – Shelved
July 4, 2012 – Shelved as: arc-publisher-netgalley-edelweiss
July 4, 2012 – Shelved as: have-in-audio
July 4, 2012 – Shelved as: favorite-authors
July 4, 2012 – Shelved as: science-fiction
July 22, 2012 – Started Reading
July 22, 2012 – Shelved as: audio-also-listened-to
July 22, 2012 – Shelved as: listened-to-audio-only
July 22, 2012 – Shelved as: only-listeneed-to
July 22, 2012 – Shelved as: first-in-series
July 25, 2012 –
5.0% "Octavia Butler needs more attention. This books is amazing."
July 26, 2012 – Shelved as: shifter
July 26, 2012 – Shelved as: african-american
July 26, 2012 – Shelved as: epic
July 26, 2012 – Shelved as: historical-fiction
July 26, 2012 – Shelved as: will-continue-series
July 26, 2012 – Shelved as: gender-bending
July 26, 2012 –
50.0% "Octavia Butler needs more attention. This books is amazing."
July 27, 2012 –
75.0%
July 31, 2012 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-24 of 24 (24 new)

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Damali *thumbs up*


Regina I know, the horrible pressure of ARCs. I am confident I will love it. I actually just bought the audio, so I thought -- why not request the arc too?
Damali -- I know I will love it!


message 3: by Des (new) - rated it 4 stars

Des This was a wild ride. Definitely unlike anything I've ever read before. I'm so happy her books are now available as ebooks.


Regina Desiree wild ride is so right. Butler continues to blow all barriers in literature and completley surprise me. This is very new for me in so many ways, but I really like it.


Michelle, the Bookshelf Stalker Why, why, why did I look here. The goal is to reduce the list not add to it. Oh well, I always know that this is the price to pay when I look to see what you are currently reading! LOL


Regina LOL -- same to you Michelle. :)


[Name Redacted] I enjoyed this book, and loved the way Butler confronted so many issues in a single story, but I did chuckle at how sterotypically evil and oppressive and malicious the male super-being proved to be.


Regina Ian I agree. I wonder if it has to do with when the book was written? It was originally published in 1980 and I can see her crafting of that character and critique of him being timely in 1980. What did you think of the end? I was sort of disappointed (view spoiler)

I do plan to read the next one, I am hoping for a satisfying resolution.


Spider the Doof Warrior I would LOVE to be a shapeshifter. Check out Wraelthu by Storm Constantine by the way... It involves some fascinating hermaphrodites with mystical genitals.


Regina Oh interesting. Thank you, I will look into that. I really like how Butler did not shy away from the implications of the characters being able to take on different genders.


Spider the Doof Warrior Going to have gender shapeshifers in a book i am writing.


 Linda (Miss Greedybooks) Synesthesia wrote: "Going to have gender shapeshifers in a book i am writing."

I like that! Notify me when I can read it please.


Regina Linda wrote: "Synesthesia wrote: "Going to have gender shapeshifers in a book i am writing."

I like that! Notify me when I can read it please."


Yes, please let me know when you are done. Very interesting.


[Name Redacted] Regina wrote: "Ian I agree. I wonder if it has to do with when the book was written? It was originally published in 1980 and I can see her crafting of that character and critique of him being timely in 1980. W..."

I agree with your analysis of the ending. That feels more like something that should've happened earlier on in their association, not at the end.


message 15: by Mary (new) - rated it 5 stars

Mary what is "urban" fantasy?


[Name Redacted] Typically it means fantasy that takes place in the modern world, usually in a city, as opposed to fantasy that takes place in a far off land or a rural area. So, for instance, Jim Butcher's "Dresden Files" books.


Kelly (Maybedog) She's one of my favorite authors. Parable of the Sower is my favorite I think.


Regina Kelly I love that book. Have you read all of her stuff?


Kelly (Maybedog) No, not everything. I have trouble reading everything a beloved but dead author wrote because I know there's no more. It's dumb because I don't feel that way about a long-dead author but there it is. I've probably read 2/3rds?


message 20: by Mary (new) - rated it 5 stars

Mary Ian wrote: "Typically it means fantasy that takes place in the modern world, usually in a city, as opposed to fantasy that takes place in a far off land or a rural area. So, for instance, Jim Butcher's "Dresde..."

Ah, I see. But this story takes place in rural settings pretty much throughout the book. It's far from Urban.


[Name Redacted] Mary wrote: "Ian wrote: "Typically it means fantasy that takes place in the modern world, usually in a city, as opposed to fantasy that takes place in a far off land or a rural area. So, for instance, Jim Butch..."

I'm inclined to agree with you. Also, i always felt that this was a sci-fi book.


Regina I classify it as urban fantasy b/c it is my understanding that eventually the series stretches into modern times.

I think it could fit under quite a few classifications.


[Name Redacted] I know eventually it turns into a series about space-travel and extra-planetary colonization. I think that, coupled with its resemblance to the X-men premise, influenced my perception of it.


Regina Ian that sounds really interesting, I really need to continue on in this series.


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