Kindred (novel)

Kindred
First edition cover of Kindred
AuthorOctavia E. Butler
Cover artistLarry Schwinger
LanguageEnglish
Genreneo-slave narrative using science fiction framework
PublisherDoubleday
Publication date
June 1979
Publication placeUnited States
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages264 pp
Awards2003 Rochester, New York's book of the year
ISBN0-385-15059-8
OCLC4835229
813/.5/4
LC ClassPZ4.B98674 Ki PS3552.U827

Kindred (1979) is a novel by American writer Octavia E. Butler that incorporates time travel and is modeled on slave narratives. Widely popular, it has frequently been chosen as a text by community-wide reading programs and book organizations, and for high school and college courses.

The book is the first-person account of a young African-American writer, Dana, who is repeatedly transported in time between her Los Angeles, California home in 1976 with her white husband and an early 19th-century Maryland plantation just outside Easton. There she meets some of her ancestors: a proud, free Black woman and a white planter who forces her into slavery and concubinage. As Dana stays for longer periods in the past, she becomes intimately entangled with the plantation community. Dana makes hard choices to survive slavery and to ensure her return to her own time.

Kindred explores the dynamics and dilemmas of antebellum slavery from the sensibility of a late 20th-century Black woman, who is aware of its legacy in contemporary American society. Through the two interracial couples who form the emotional core of the story, the novel also explores the intersection of power, gender, and race issues, and speculates on the prospects of future egalitarianism.

While most of Butler's work is classified as science fiction, Kindred crosses genre boundaries and is also classified as African-American literature. Butler categorized the work as "a kind of grim fantasy."[1]

  1. ^ Snider, John C. (June 2004). "Interview: Octavia E. Butler". SciFiDimensions. Archived from the original on December 20, 2014. Retrieved December 4, 2013.