Jeremy Keith
Mediocre middle-aged white man from Ireland, working with @Clearleft, playing music with @SalterCane, creator of @Huffduffer, curator of @SessionUpdates. he/him
Book Recommendations:
Recommended by Jeremy Keith
“@molly0xFFF @ASpittel Ooh, Parable of the Sower *almost* topped my fiction list this year (great book!): https://t.co/XK9YKEvFMB I’ll definitely be reading Parable of the Talents in 2022. https://t.co/zc9IQNVbp5” (from X)
by Octavia E. Butler, Gloria Steinem·You?
by Octavia E. Butler, Gloria Steinem·You?
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.
Recommended by Jeremy Keith
“@molly0xFFF @ASpittel Ooh, Parable of the Sower *almost* topped my fiction list this year (great book!): https://t.co/XK9YKEvFMB I’ll definitely be reading Parable of the Talents in 2022. https://t.co/zc9IQNVbp5” (from X)
by Octavia E. Butler·You?
by Octavia E. Butler·You?
Octavia Butler tackles the creation of a new religion, the making of a god, and the ultimate fate of humanity in her Earthseed series, which began with Parable of the Sower, and now continues with Parable of the Talents. The saga began with the near-future dystopian tale of Sower, in which young Lauren Olamina began to realize her destiny as a leader of people dispossessed and destroyed by the crumbling of society. The basic principles of Lauren's faith, Earthseed, were contained in a collection of deceptively simple proverbs that Lauren used to recruit followers. She teaches that "God is change" and that humanity's ultimate destiny is among the stars. In Parable of the Talents, the seeds of change that Lauren planted begin to bear fruit, but in unpredictable and brutal ways. Her small community is destroyed, her child is kidnapped, and she is imprisoned by sadistic zealots. She must find a way to escape and begin again, without family or friends. Her single-mindedness in teaching Earthseed may be her only chance to survive, but paradoxically, may cause the ultimate estrangement of her beloved daughter. Parable of the Talents is told from both mother's and daughter's perspectives, but it is the narrative of Lauren's grown daughter, who has seen her mother made into a deity of sorts, that is the most compelling. Butler's writing is simple and elegant, and her storytelling skills are superb, as usual. Fans will be eagerly awaiting the next installment in what promises to be a moving and adventurous saga. —Therese Littleton