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Kindred
 
 

Kindred [Paperback]

Octavia E. Butler
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (113 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 11.24
Price: CDN$ 10.96 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 25. Details
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Product Description

From AudioFile

Being transported in time to the ante-bellum South would hardly be the first choice of a young black woman of the 1970's--even if it's to save the life of the slaveholder who otherwise might never grow up to be her ancestor. This may seem farfetched to some, but it provides the framework for a poignant and thought-provoking novel about slavery, survival and human nature. Kim Staunton removes any sense of strangeness for the reader and moves skillfully between the time periods as this unusual time-link continues. Her use of accents not only directs the listener through the changing settings, but also showcases the dynamic attitudes and emotions of the characters and their relationships with each other and the shifting social contexts in which they find themselves. J.E.M. (c)AudioFile, Portland, Maine

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Customer Reviews

113 Reviews
5 star:
 (85)
4 star:
 (19)
3 star:
 (5)
2 star:
 (4)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.6 out of 5 stars (113 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Kindred, Feb 28 2010
By 
Clare Brennan (Australia) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Kindred (Paperback)
Kindred is the amazing story of Dana, a modern day black woman who keeps getting pulled back into the slavery era South. She has no control over when this happens and experiences the joys, pain and suffering of life in those times. The story was shocking, confronting and surprising. It was at times moving and gives great insight into the minds of both the slaves and the owners. It keeps you guessing from the very first page. A wonderful book, a thoroughly engaging and enjoyable read that will make you want to pick it up again and again.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars It doesn't quite manage to take its readers back in time., Jun 27 2004
By 
This review is from: Kindred (Paperback)
Octavia Butler's "Kindred" is both startlingly interesting, and a little contrived. It's a quick read, and well worth the weekend it takes to finish. However, it is not really a book of inexhaustible depth. Just a good (if harrowing) little novella, that makes its not-so-subtle point by trying to get the reader to experience the past as a modern time traveler would. Sometimes called a science fiction novel, the book's one "sci-fi" trope---time travel---is used simply to place a modern character in a historical setting. I would predict that science fiction devotees would not find that part of the novel at all impressive.

Inexplicably, the novel's protagonist (a 20th century black woman, named Dana) is transported to ante bellum Maryland, where on a slave plantation, she meets (and repeatedly saves) her great-great-grandfather. The twist: this particular grandfather was slave-master to her great-great grandmother. As the novel progresses, Dana realizes her goal is to help ensure their fertile coupling... and her own future. But climbing this branch of the family tree won't be easy, given that she must experience all the horrors of slavery in order to make that happen. Hence the double entendre which is the basis of the title (Kindred = "kin dread").

Along the way, the reader has the opportunity to watch as Rufus Weylin grows up from careless little boy to crass slave-holding plantation owner. Back and forth Dana travels between her familiar modern-day life as a young writer, and the dreary hell of a southern plantation. When Rufus' life is in danger, she comes to him. When she feels her own is in danger, she returns... but always with reminders of this horrific past scarred into her body.

Butler tries to present her reader with something like the grand tour of the old south... a Colonial Williamsburg of the slave plantation, but with none of the predictable horrors expunged. Rapes, whippings, disease, and the sale of human slaves (often done to intentionally divide families) bluntly fills up the bulk of the book. But the real pathos of the book is the effect all this has on four major characters: Dana, Rufus, Dana's husband Kevin (who is white), and Alice.

Alice is a free woman who is taken into bondage by the Weylins after she tries to help her lover (a slave) escape. Dana's quest is to ensure that Alice and Rufus produce a healthy offspring... thus ensuring her own lineage and future life. That's not going to be easy, given the fact that Rufus is a repulsive lout whom Alice understandably despises.

Reading "Kindred", I couldn't help but feeling that the novel was somewhat contrived. First, there are the repeated attempts to remind the reader of famous black Americans of the period (Frederick Douglas, Sojourner Truth, Nat Turner), making the book at least partly a vehicle for a PBS-like history lesson. Secondly, its attempt to present the customs of the era is not really entirely precise. It focuses too much on those parts of the past that its liberal-minded audience would find most uncomfortable: mostly, the attitudes of slave-holding whites' towards this proud, literate protagonist, but also the complex relationship between field hands and house slaves. Where it tries to recreate the mundane details of 19th century life---say, medicine, language, cooking, farm life, religion or education----the book comes across as tepid at best, and misleading at worst.

Then, of course, there are the very unusual hopeful notes. That Dana eventually convinces Rufus to allow her to school the slave children seems an utterly modern contrivance. Skeptical readers will wonder how Dana, a pants-wearning, back-talking feminist, who is not only the wife of a white man, but also has the peculiar habit of vanishing into thin air, is not simply killed outright by the semi-literate, superstitious, and violent plantation owners. Instead, she becomes their trusted servant, privy to their most innermost secrets. Go figure.

Still, it's a good little page-turner... the kind of breezy read that keeps the impatient interested in what will happen next. The book would be an excellent vehicle for a high school class studying African American history or literature. But for real depth and historical imagination, I would recommend Toni Morrison's "Beloved" or Shirley Ann William's "Dessa Rose," or even William Styron's "The Confessions of Nat Turner," all of which are perpetually interesting and challenging in a way that "Kindred" simply isn't.

3 and 1/2 stars (rounded up)

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2.0 out of 5 stars Slavery and time travel; a confusing combination!, July 29 2011
By 
Ronald W. Maron "pilgrim" (Nova Scotia) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Kindred (Paperback)
After reading about Ms. Butler's reputation for her quality writing skills, I was looking forward to reading my copy of "Kindred". While the story aptly covered the deplorable conditions connected with antebellum slavery, the science fiction portion of this tale, the transition between different eras, was quite awkward and obtuse in both its manner and believability. If the author wanted to tell a tale of forced labor conditions she simply should have produced ah historical novel rather than attempting to add the science fiction addendum. Furthermore, if the heroine was returning to the plantation in order to ensure that her relative from the past, Hagar, was safely born, why did the author have her return once this birth had occurred? The child was freed at that point and was safe from immediate harm. This last return unfortunately forced the author to write a highly bizarre and useless ending that was much out of character with the rest of the text. Lastly, the character development was neither complete nor compelling regarding Dana. She came across as rather flat, lacking in the courage associated with a person of character and was always carping about her difficulties with life at the cost of ignoring those in much worse conditions around her.

I will not give up on the author with this single reading but, rather, will purchase another one of her books with the hopes that this was not one of her finest and that 'the best is yet to come'.
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