Seed to Harvest is a collection of four stories (“Wild Seed”, “Mind of my Mind”, “Clay’s Ark” and “Patternmaster”) by Octavia Butler in her Patternist series. Each story is set at a different point along the timeline of an alternate Earth – “Wild Seed” in the 17th-19th centuries, “Mind of my Mind” at more or less present time, “Clay’s Ark” in a near future, and “Patternmaster” in a more distant future.

The stories follow the rise of a group of mutated humans, most of whom have some sort of mental abilities (telepathy, telekinesis, etc.) and who have been bred together by Doro (the ‘first’ mutant, and strongest) to enhance their abilities. The first two stories follow the rise of these mutants. The third story introduces an alien organism which is brought back to earth by the first interstellar explorers and begins to transform the humans it infects into its own form of life. The final book explores the conflict between the patternists (the telepaths) and the clayarks (the alien infected human hybrids) in a world in which ordinary humans have been reduced to mind-controlled labor.

There’s two things that especially struck me as I read these stories.

The first is the power of a strong character. In the first two stories, Butler flies in the face of convention – at least the convention that you’ll read in most writing books. The plot is minimal and the setting is secondary. They are both simply explorations of two characters–Doro and Anyanwu (his most powerful mutant), how they act and how they interact with each other. And it works! Because she’s created two strong, complex characters that fascinate in and of themselves. It just goes to show, in my opinion, that strong characters are just as valuable as strong plot.

The second thing that struck me is Butler’s world building. I don’t think I’ve ever been more impressed. First of all, she’s created a world (in the literary sense) that not only stretches across space but also encompasses at least five centuries (and probably more) of time. The world doesn’t remain static, each story is different. There is a sense of history, of things changing and society adapting/evolving. Okay, that is hugely impressive by itself, but here’s what blew my mind…

She didn’t write these stories in chronological order!

The first book she wrote was the last chronologically – “Patternmaster” in 1976. Then came the 2nd book “Mind of My Mind” in 1977, “Wild Seed” (the first book chronologically) in 1980, and finally “Clay’s Ark” in 1984.

This tells me one of two things: either she plotted all of this out beforehand and then simply wrote them out of order (I find this theory less likely) or she wrote a story and did some worldbuilding and then expanded her world backwards to backfill the history of how it got to that state.

Either way, she created a world so detailed and so rich that she could simply pick a spot in time and write a story placed in that world. It seems to me that that is something to strive for if you are an aspiring writer – a world right there in your mind that is so real to you that you can simply reach in and pluck stories out.

 

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