Obsidian's Reviews > Parable of the Sower

Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler
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I only gave this book 2.5 stars but rounded it up to 3 stars on Goodreads due to Goodreads not having half stars available.

So I always hate it when I notice friends who I follow and trust for book recs loved a book and I ended up disliking it. I feel badly about it and then I feel guilty because I write a review talking about things that they really enjoyed.

I read this book as part of Dead Writers Society Genre Challenge for the month of March. I can say I loved the other book I read and thought this one was...problematic.

Taking place in 2025, we follow the character of Lauren Olamina and her family that are living in what remains of areas around Los Angeles. Told in the first person, we get Lauren's "insights" into her family, friends, community, and what the world is turning into.

Let's get it out of the way. Lauren bugged the crap out of me.

Being stuck in her head from beginning to the end of this book sucked. She is emotionless which doesn't make any sense at all because of her hyper empathy ability. I get she had to train herself to not show anyone besides her family about her ability (which still makes no damn sense...at all) but wouldn't you be feeling more than everyone else, or at least not come across as robotic when we read her diary entries and we get actually dialogue between her and other characters? Don't get me started at how sometimes it seemed to be "on" and other times "not."

I can't even get into the problems I found with anyone sitting around and following a character her age while she decides to go forth and spread her religion she has made up that she calls Earthseed.

The whole Earthseed thing didn't even fit since at one point Lauren's character was focused on being self reliant because she fears the walled neighborhoods she has lived in with her family is eventually going to be overrun. I have no idea why all of a sudden this turned to a whole Earthseed is the way thing and other religions have failed because they are not practicing what they are preaching and she has found flaws in other religions.

The other characters in this book are not developed enough beyond Lauren's father. Everyone else is just a cliche or there to move the plot forward. For example, the character of Keith I thought would have a huge role to potentially play maybe in the latter part of the book. We focus on him for a minute and then events happen, yadda yadda yadda we don't need to follow Keith anymore. Same thing when I thought we would get some friction and maybe some honesty between Lauren and her stepmother Cory. That was a nope again.

There is another character introduced in this book named Bankhole and his relationship with Lauren. Nope. There scenes together gave me the shivers. Not in the good way. Once again he's not developed enough for me to care about and is only used to shove the plot forward in the case of Lauren's ultimate goal of spreading the word about Earthseed.

My other problem is that the main plot just shifted too many times for me to care. First, it seemed to be about surviving in this post apocalyptic world. Than it was about Lauren deciding to escape up north where things are better. Then it became about establishing Earthseed. I mean what the hell?

The writing wasn't great. I think my issue was that each chapter started off with some writing from Lauren regarding Earthseed.

"The Self must create
Its own reasons for being.
To shape God,
Shape Self."

“The essentials," I answered, "are to learn to shape God with forethought, care, and work; to educate and benefit their community, their families, and themselves; and to contribute to the fulfillment of the Destiny.”

“God is Change."


Did I maybe have some wine yesterday after finishing up this book. Yes. Yes I did.

We also skip over time a lot for most of the book which I wish we had not. It didn't make any sense. Frankly the book could have been split pre-community breakdown and then after the community breakdown. I was honestly ever really interested in the community that lived there and wish that we had focused more on them, their lives, what they were dealing with, and how they were getting by. I thought the story became more unfocused when we had Lauren going outside the walls.

The flow was a mess too. At one point we had a diary entry that read as one really long day (which I know wasn't possible) so it didn't work for me at all.

The setting of Los Angeles in 2025 is a mess. I already went through this in my status updates. Both for those who skipped my rage updates as I started calling them to myself yesterday, there didn't seem to be much thought behind the world is in a bad state and that was it.

We have discussions and asides thrown out about how people are still paying there property taxes on homes. That people still possess life insurance. That the National Guard does still exist. Um excuse you? Why the hell are people than going around willy nilly and slaughtering neighborhoods? Where the hell are the police in this? It doesn't make sense you have to pay them to investigate crimes! You either have a totally destabilized federal, state, and local government or you don't. You can't sorta have things still exist and handwave it away that only the rich are able to protect themselves.

Also what the hell caused all of this? There is an allusion made about climate. But that doesn't even begin to explain how society broke down enough to just get walled neighborhoods up and people having to grow their own food, purchase it for extremely high prices, and buy water. Or why there are still drug pushers developing drugs that apparently make people want to start fires.

The ending was a total non-starter for me. I didn't care about Earthseed, and Lauren's supposed wisdom was bullshit. It's the kind of crap I used to spout when I was a teenager after thinking I was the shit after reading Anyn Rand. I was in a word, an asshole. I would never follow teen me any damn where so yeah as a 36 year old I would have scoffed at Lauren's ass and went my own way.
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Reading Progress

March 25, 2016 – Started Reading
March 25, 2016 – Shelved
March 25, 2016 – Shelved as: genres-for-everyone-dws
March 28, 2016 –
29.0% "Ya'll.
Ya'll.
I hate this book. Seriously. I am at 29 percent and so far the only character I can stand is the main character's father. So let's tick off what doesn't make sense in this new world that our main character Lauren finds herself.

-Something has happened, it is alluded that some huge climate change has wrecked the world as we know it. That's all I've gotten and we are at 29 percent."
March 28, 2016 –
29.0% "-Lauren is a know it all. And aggravating as hell. Seriously, I wanted to just yell at her to get off my lawn. The only saving grace is that so far I have not been treated to any comments about how unattractive she finds herself and then we hear from all around her how beautiful she is.
-Most of Lauren's family is pissing me off except for her one brother and father. Her stepmother is an asshole."
March 28, 2016 –
29.0% "There is a scene where her dislike for her comes out and she is angry that no one is babying her shit for brains son Keith.
-Keith. I hate this character and want to knock some sense into him."
March 28, 2016 –
29.0% "These people are still paying taxes. Yup. That right there just blows me away. The world has gone to hell in a handbasket, people are breaking into walled neighborhoods and raping, murdering, and stealing and you are telling me people are still paying the freaking government taxes? WTF.
-People are still going to work. Even though they can end up dead.... One of the things that took me out of the"
March 28, 2016 –
29.0% "Godzilla movie (so many things) was the fact that in one of scenes people were still going to work. Though a freaking reptile and giant moth were stampeding across the U.S. Are you serious with this?"
March 28, 2016 –
29.0% "The U.S. is still having elections talking about a return for better days. But it sounds like the whole U.S. has gone to pot. The citizens are expected to pay separately for police to investigate crimes and the fire department to put out fires and also for water from water merchants. Um what the hell are those property taxes they are still paying for being used for?"
March 28, 2016 –
36.0% "Sigh. Lauren is an asshole. We do get someone's death I hated so there's that going for the book now."
March 28, 2016 –
39.0% "If the world goes to hell I can promise you I will not still be paying my life insurance. I just..words fail me right now. I think that is my whole problem with this whole thing. People are poor and can barely afford food and water and are paying property taxes, own homes, and oh yeah are paying life insurance?!"
March 28, 2016 –
50.0% "And now at 50 percent the time that Lauren was worried about has come, her community has fallen. And seriously once again I don't get how the communities all around did not just band together and take out the "painters" as they are called here and just wipe them out"
March 28, 2016 –
52.0% "Oh joy. Well now Lauren is walking north with what remains of her community (Harry and Zahra). And now I am seeing some The Walking Dead comparisons."
March 28, 2016 –
73.0% "So the National Guard exists...

Lauren is starting her own religion or way I guess you can call it called Earthseed which is just stupid based on the writing I've read.

Did I mention she has a special ability to feel other's pain? Yeah. It makes no sense at all and every time she fights someone or kills them she overloads and passes out. Some leader."
March 28, 2016 –
100.0% "Sigh. Nope."
March 29, 2016 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-50 of 55 (55 new)


message 1: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm so glad that I bailed on this halfway through & spared myself the greater aggravation. Everything you say here, I'm nodding YES YES YES.


Obsidian Karla wrote: "I'm so glad that I bailed on this halfway through & spared myself the greater aggravation. Everything you say here, I'm nodding YES YES YES."

Yeah I had to stop after book #1. This was not great. I enjoyed Xenogenesis much more.


message 3: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm debating whether to read another Butler. I probably will. Either Xenogenesis or Kindred. But I'm not all that eager to dive back into the waters so soon.


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

And your status updates are gold, BTW. *dying*


Obsidian Karla wrote: "And your status updates are gold, BTW. *dying*"

Lol thanks!


Maryann This is honestly one of the most accurate reviews of this book, I have ever read. You have summed up my sentiments EXACTLY. I don't know how I managed to get through to the end (plenty skimming) but oh man.


Obsidian Maryann wrote: "This is honestly one of the most accurate reviews of this book, I have ever read. You have summed up my sentiments EXACTLY. I don't know how I managed to get through to the end (plenty skimming) bu..."

Thank you! Yeah I had a really hard time with this one. It was just all over the place. Have been hesitant to read the second book.


Obsidian I’ve loved her other books, just not this series.


Shereen You nailed it. Every time she started in with the earth seed stuff I’d just roll my eyes and wonder if I was reading about the start of a cult. I really wanted to love this book. I really didn’t.


Obsidian Shereen wrote: "You nailed it. Every time she started in with the earth seed stuff I’d just roll my eyes and wonder if I was reading about the start of a cult. I really wanted to love this book. I really didn’t."

I may go back and finish one day, it definitely did not grab me like her other works though.


Nicole Bannister I didn't enjoy it Either it was just ok


Stephanie Drieling I agree with every bit of this. Great review!


Obsidian Thanks!


Tatiana I've been struggling with this book, for many of the reasons you mention in your review.


Obsidian Tatiana wrote: "I've been struggling with this book, for many of the reasons you mention in your review."

Yeah I loved her other works and this one just was so tough to get through.


Megan Love this review! You captured how I feel too. I just kept thinking … if an 18 year old told me in a bland emotionless voice “god is change. Change is god.” I would not be compelled to follow her like a lamb, much less indulge her by asking questions about a religion she just entirely made up herself. I couldn’t really get past that huge logical gap. If the world was burning (literally) down around me I am pretty sure I wouldn’t give a hoot what some kid’s repetitive poems about a god they invented when they were 14.

And you’re so right about the moving goalposts, which I guess was maybe realistic — I imagine that’s how it could truly be if we were in such a society — but for the reader it just left me mildly confused for the whole book. And then the book was over! Love the author but this didn’t click for me at all.


Obsidian Megan wrote: "Love this review! You captured how I feel too. I just kept thinking … if an 18 year old told me in a bland emotionless voice “god is change. Change is god.” I would not be compelled to follow her l..."

I just would have laughed and kept moving. I just didn't get why people were following her. It just didn't work and strained credibility that anyone would. The next book wasn't much better IMHO.


Marla I so agree. I was bored the whole second half of book wondering when it would get to the point of all this. But, nothing. And yes, Lauren was annoying and I didn't understand her lack of emotional empathy but she felt other's physical pain. But only if she inflicted that pain? Very confusing. Glad I wasn't the only one.


Obsidian Yeah this series was meh for me.


message 20: by Mar (new) - rated it 3 stars

Mar Toscano I agree with you. Your review capture the essence of what I felt reading this novel. 😂


Obsidian Her other works are much better.


Needle To Narrative | Chantel You just summarized what I’ve been trying to process so thank you!


Obsidian Welcome!


Laurie Byro Agree with you completely. You feel bad though and not badly, as James Brown didn't feel goodly. (Grammar police) and so when you write a review so well, it throws one off. But what you said, you got it right. I think certain books that are perhaps difficult to read or write or I dunno, people FEAR being honest about. I just reviewed Amanda Gorman's and will get blow back about it, but on we go. I think as times change, how we perceive a book or a writer changes. She had great courage, me thinks to write this book, especially WHEN she did and as a black woman, so I give her kudos for that. But it wasn't what I expected, and I don't mean that in a good way.


Anne  M Picken I agree with your review. It was a dark read that I just kept hoping would have a light at its end, only to continue the story in the next book. I almost gave up on this one and don’t plan on continuing the series.


Obsidian Anne M Picken wrote: "I agree with your review. It was a dark read that I just kept hoping would have a light at its end, only to continue the story in the next book. I almost gave up on this one and don’t plan on conti..."

The next book is a very hard read.


Nicole Its fiction, how can one judge a fictious religion? If you view it from thst lense, then this review makes sense I guess. It was a good book.


Derek Yes, yes, yes. I rolled my eyes each time her religion was mentioned...


message 29: by Molly (new) - rated it 1 star

Molly THANK YOU!!! I feel like a crazy person telling people I didn't like this book. Nothing makes sense and Lauren is as bland as a paper bag!


Obsidian Nicole the religion sounded absurd and took me out of the book.


Obsidian Derek, same.


Obsidian Molly I loved her other works. This one and the sequel not so much.


Julie Wright Good review. I'm giving it 3 stars, but, like you, would in reality give it 2.5.


message 34: by tianna (new) - added it

tianna I would love to know your reflections on this book now that we are in that time almost 10 years after you read this


Obsidian Julie thanks.


Obsidian The world building for me in this one didn’t work. Butler didn’t explain enough for me. And even with real world insane events by the way I think that would need to be addressed plus the whole ethos of the movement that the main character founds.


Angela M. Messino “ you either have a totally destabilized, federal, state and local government or you don’t “ You hit the nail smack on the head regarding the books major flaws! How the hell does any of this work? Is it supposed to be an allegory? Is it an actual parable? If so, what was the message? I have no clue I was expecting something else. It was at times. Interesting and dangled possibilities in front of you, but it didn’t work at least not for me.


Obsidian Angela M. Messino wrote: "“ you either have a totally destabilized, federal, state and local government or you don’t “ You hit the nail smack on the head regarding the books major flaws! How the hell does any of this work? ..."

Yeah some parts of it didn't make any sense to me. But I get what she was trying to do. But the parts that didn't make sense took me out of the book.


message 39: by Vincent (new)

Vincent De I have never agreed with a review more, this book was seriously lacking in its worldbuilding and characters which only served to hamfist a teenagers "religion"


Obsidian Thanks Vincent.


message 41: by S (new) - rated it 4 stars

S I have to agree about Lauren. She was a noisy bossy preachers kid that didn’t actually understand community. She had a cult like vibe about her. She wasn’t interested in people. She was interested in advancing her stupid religion. I did enjoy the setting and the eerie parallels of today’s society.


Obsidian I liked the parallels to today, but the character development wasn’t there for me compared to her other books.


message 43: by Eway (new) - rated it 2 stars

Eway Cai I agree! Mostly confusing and the writing itself wasn’t engaging enough for me to enjoy


message 44: by Maya (new) - rated it 3 stars

Maya Mircheva I have not finished reading the book yet but I agree with all your comments. For me the most jarring thing is the narrator’s voice, beside it being very emotionless, as you say, it is simply not credible that one is reading the thoughts of an adolescent. She sounds like an adult and I think for a writer of such calibre it is a bit of a grave mistake.


message 45: by Lina (new) - rated it 5 stars

Lina Putting aside your criticism of the MC which I don’t agree with but it’s an opinion you are entitled to, did you seriously just ask “where are the police in all of this”? After Butler repeatedly states how the police forces became corrupted & regularly discriminated against Black & Latino people? Something that has routinely been going on in real life as well btw, if you haven’t opened the news recently. It astounds me that you could find THAT part of the book unrealistic as if the worldbuilding of it is not eerily similar to how things are staring to shape up around us currently. You sound like the ignorant people in Lauren’s neighborhood from where I’m standing. I’m sorry but either you live under a rock or you don’t know how to read.


message 46: by Yun (new) - rated it 3 stars

Yun Won I am glad there is someone else who feels like this. A great review. I started the 2nd book as I thought I should finish what I started but I have decided it's not worth my time.


Ayrton This book almost entirely acts as a prequel to Parable of the Talents, which is where Butler REALLY brings out the stops.


Laurie L I’m leaving this one not finished at half way through, but yeah your comment sums up my thoughts on this book.


Obsidian I asked cause the police not being anywhere around with how we see them in this book didn’t pass a smell test. I know what Butler said about them. I’m saying this book similar to TWD never worked for me since we have about 1.2 million police running around and no I don’t think if shit hits the fan they are going to “disappear” I think many of them would try to take control or do worse. But you can’t say al certain things exist like taxes, the National Guard but not the police. She was being inconsistent. It’s either a full societal breakdown or it’s not.


Obsidian I love Butler’s Lilith’s Brood series much better Aryton.


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