![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() “Bloodchild,” the collection’s namesake, is a coming-of-age story of humans who have been forced to leave Earth and now live on an alien planet where they are not the dominant species. Butler’s stories invert traditional power dynamics by inviting readers to imagine a world where the most important decisions are made by the people who are currently marginalized. These protagonists often become leaders, innovators and pioneers, while other non-white characters are also put at the forefront to show relationships between people of color outside the framework of a society that favors whiteness. Butler often makes her characters vitally important to fixing the problems faced by humanity. Most stories feature an African-American female protagonist and are written from either a first-person-limited or third-person-limited point of view that focuses on the protagonists’ thoughts and experiences. Butler uses the limitless possibilities of science fiction to explore themes of race, gender, colonization and apocalypse, among others. Each story in the reissued edition features an afterword written by Butler, which makes clear how she uses science fiction to take a fantastical premise to its logical conclusion. It was first published in 1995 and reissued in 2005 featuring two new stories, “Amnesty” and “The Book of Martha,” as well as two essays about the power of writing and the difficulties of being an author. Bloodchild and Other Stories is a short story collection by African-American science-fiction author Octavia Butler (1947-2006). ![]()
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