I finally finished this!
This series was so heavy, but this book takes the gold metal. Not gonna lie, it gave me nightmares and took me an awfully long time to get through as I pretty much had no choice but to read it in small chunks at a time for my own sanity. It probably wasn’t the best choice for my early morning reading slot and could quite possibly have been the fuel for some nasty moods that settled over me these past days, but I’m so glad I finished it. Taking the experience and thoughts it provided me was worth it.
Parable of the Talents resumes directly after the events of Parable of the Sower. Taking place in the 2030s we once again follow Lauren Olamina in her quest to survive her post-apocalyptic surroundings in a divided and dangerous nation all while continuing to build and spread her religion called Earthseed, having a daughter of her own, and unexpectedly facing someone from her past. Taken to new extremes and heights, the story treads us through the terrors of religious fanaticism, the dangers of weaponizing religion, and the threat of leadership falling into the hands of an ultra-conservative president.
Make America Great Again
Now where have we all heard those words before? This puts this book straight into haunting status just for that, in my opinion. The events of these books are just too relevant to our current times. Too familiar. Too eye-opening. And oh so frightening.
President Jarret
“Join us! Our doors are open to every nationality, every race! Leave your sinful past behind, and become one of us. Help us to make America great again.”
“Jarret's supporters are more than a little seduced by Jarret's talk of making America great again. He seems to be unhappy with certain other countries. We could wind up in a war. Nothing like a war to rally people around flag, country, and great leader.”
“It seems inevitable that people who can’t read are going to lean more toward judging candidates on the way they look and sound than on what they claim they stand for.”
“He does seem to enjoy calling people things like that. Once he’s made everyone who isn’t like him sound evil, then he can blame them for problems he knows they didn’t cause. That’s easier than trying to fix the problems.”
“But he left the Baptists behind years ago to begin his own “Christian America” denomination.”
“President Jarett and his followers in Christian America believed that one of the things that had gone wrong with the country was the intrusion of women into men’s business.”
I’ve got chills recapping all of this, and I’m so unsettled. So eerily familiar.
When I said how eye-opening and relevant this series is, I mean it has made me think so much that my head hurts. It has reassured me I would not last a second in a post apocalyptic environment such as this. I would never conform or have the strength to continue on in a world with such devastation. And devastation doesn’t even feel like a strong enough word to describe what happened to the poor characters in this book all because they chose to believe and lead their own settlement under their own religion while being targeted by the ultra-conservative reign of President Jarret.
“Good things were the acts of our “teachers” or of God. Bad things were our fault…if you hear nonsense like that long enough, you begin to believe it.”
There are loads of trigger warnings that come with this book. Modern day slavery plays a huge role. Please check them all before picking this one up.
All that being said, I am sure the themes have made some people perceive the core aspects of this book to be an attack on Christianity itself, but this is so much grander than that. The danger therein lies on extremism and forcing and/or seducing others to be followers of a hypocritical movement that exists merely using a front to obscure the desire for power through means of corruption. Even the emphasis on the Earthseed religion has its faults if you analyze it enough though it is still seen to be the more fundamentally logical option when compared to the extremes of Christian America and even organized religion.
“By the time I got my Master’s in history, I found that I couldn’t muster any belief in a literal heaven or hell, anyway. I thought the best we could all do was to look after one another and clean up the various hells we’ve made right here on earth.”
“All religions are ultimately cargo cults. Adherents perform required rituals, follow specific rules, and expect to be supernaturally gifted with desired rewards—long life, honor, wisdom, children, good health, wealth, victory over opponents, immortality after death, any desired rewards.”
One of the major conflicting views I have when it comes to Earthseed is its goal of taking root among the stars. I think as humans we always see ourselves as the superior race and imagine this fantasy of colonizing another planet and leaving Earth behind after all the destruction we’ve done here is irreparable. But is that even ethical? Who says our species deserves to survive and have the ability of bringing ruin and destruction to another planet? If it were in order to start over, and we were to learn from our mistakes here on Earth then it would be a different story. But can that be guaranteed? Humanity is, even at its best, solidly weak and unreliable.
I read somewhere this series was planned as a trilogy by the author Octavia Butler, but she passed before this could come to fruition. But do not let that worry you in picking up this duology as the ending of this book still feels complete.
My very last thought: I hate Marc. I hated everything he stood for, his in denial and hypocritical attitude, and his annoying dedication to something that caused his sister so much pain and suffering. It triggered me!! Even if I cannot relate to a mother losing a child, I can understand the feeling of being betrayed by someone you care about.