A review by booklistqueen
Kindred by Octavia E. Butler

dark emotional reflective sad tense medium-paced

5.0

In 1976, Dana, a young African-American writer, finds herself inexplicably sent back through time to a pre-Civil War plantation in Maryland. After saving a drowning white boy, she finds herself back in Los Angeles. Over and over, Dana finds herself returning to the plantation whenever the boy is in trouble, which she realizes is where her ancestors lived. As her stays in the past become longer, Dana becomes entangled in the plantation and is forced to make harder and harder choices to survive. Octavia Butler's genre-bending novel is a must-read among time travel books.

I can see why Octavia Butler is considered one of the best writers of her generation. A genre-bending novel, Kindred combines the "what if"s of the best science fiction with deeply-researched historical fiction. Kindred is brilliant top to bottom: a gripping premise, compelling narrative, memorable characters, and nuanced themes. Butler thought-provokingly dives into the complexity of slavery's dynamics, leaving the reader plenty to ponder on racism, both historically and today.