Before passing in Lake Forest Park, Octavia Butler was the 'most eloquent and elegant' voice of a movement
The KUOW Book Club read "Positive Obsession: The Life and Times of Octavia E. Butler" by Susana M. Morris this month. I'm your reading guide Katie Campbell. Morris joined me on Zoom recently to talk about her biography of a literary legend. Listen to our full conversation by hitting the play button above.
T
he moment Susana M. Morris first came upon a novel by Octavia Butler could have been the setup for one of the great science fiction author's stories.
Morris was 15, wandering through her public library's science fiction section. This was Fort Lauderdale, Fla., in the mid-90s — her options were limited. This was also the era of shows like "Candid Camera" and "Punk'd." So when she saw a copy of "Parable of the Sower" with the cover facing out, as if it was there just for her, Morris thought she was being pranked.
"When I saw the book and saw that it had been written by a Black woman... and there was a Black woman on the cover, I thought, 'This is not real. Y'all are setting me up. Where's the camera?'" Morris told me.
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Morris suddenly saw herself reflected in a genre dominated by white men and white male characters. She'd found one of Butler's most celebrated novels, one that centered a young Black woman like Morris.
"Some librarian said, 'I'm going to not just file this here, but I'm going to face the cover out so that someone can see it.' Those are choices that librarians make," Morris said. "Maybe it was an afterthought or maybe it was a very intentional kind of situation. But I thank them regardless, because it really changed the trajectory of my life."
Since then, Morris has become an educator, a scholar of Afrofuturism, and an author herself. And in her latest work, "Positive Obsession: The Life and Times of Octavia E. Butler," she paid homage to the woman who sent her down that path.
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Butler was key to the development of Afrofuturism, which Morris described as a movement that frames African diasporic cultural practices as central to the continuation of human society. Butler's stories centered Black women in particular, and asked difficult questions about humanity's hierarchal tendencies. Though she wrote fiction, Butler also tried to warn readers about threats she saw on the horizon: climate change, the rise of white nationalism and fascism, the breakdown of social safety nets.
When the KUOW Book Club read "Fledgling," the last novel Butler published before she died suddenly in her Lake Forest Park home, I spoke to her longtime friend and fellow author Nisi Shawl. I was surprised when Shawl said this of Butler: "I honestly don't know if she would have been able to keep writing, because she was already doing her utmost to put an optimistic spin on what she wrote 40 years ago."
RELATED: 'Fledgling' is Octavia Butler's unfinished but fundamental legacy. Book Club check-in
I asked Morris what she thought of that.
"I can see that being the case. ... She may have been so frustrated, because she wasn't the only person [warning us]," Morris said. "She was probably the most eloquent and elegant voice saying it, but she was part of a chorus. She was leading a chorus of folks, saying, 'These are things we need to pay attention to. There are ways in which our society is not working.'"
If you, like me, are sad to think of a universe in which Butler no longer felt like her writing, her positive obsession, was worth it anymore, be heartened by this from Morris' epilogue:
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Submission, after all, would be antithetical to Butler's entire life, her legacy.
Morris went on:
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Morris' biography of Butler is a continuation of that gesture of hope.
"Positive Obsession" is both a lovingly detailed account of Butler's life and a sort of refresher course on her work, the research that went into it, and the lasting legacy she left. Butler's strength of imagination and will paved the way for literary greats like Rivers Solomon and N. K. Jemisin. The world was robbed when Butler died at just 58 years old, but the literary landscape she sowed continues to thrive. Morris' work, both as an author and an educator who teaches Butler's work, is a testament to that.
Let's not forget, too, the small role the Pacific Northwest played in Butler's story, albeit later in her life:
In answer to the classic "if you could have dinner with anyone, dead or alive" question, I often choose Butler. But after reading this passage, I would have preferred to join her on one of those sojourns. I like to think of her wandering the Olympic Peninsula, at ease and in love with her surroundings. I wonder, too, how she might have felt to see the place where she made her home become unaffordable to so many, to see how the tech sector changed Seattle, and how the Covid pandemic would permanently change the world.
Though Nisi Shawl and Morris certainly know her better, I like to think Butler would have kept writing into old age. Perhaps she would have written the "Fledgling" sequel or continued the "Parable" series. Or perhaps she would have written something entirely new, something poignant about book bans or LGBTQ rights or AI.
Can you imagine?
I think she could've.
RELATED: New biography shows how Octavia Butler deserved better early in her career
Listen to my conversation with Susana M. Morris by hitting the play button above.