Years ago, when I had a fairly long daily commute, I quickly burned through all of
Octavia Butler's books that were in print at the time. There was something about the situations and the character interactions within the work that captured very familiar feelings and sensations, despite the unfamiliar field where those phenomena took place. Critics and readers have pointed out the racial, sexual and gender themes that weave through her novels. For me, however, their profundity came not just from those "real world" topics, but from the characters'
reactions to them, which was captured not just in dialog but within the narrative itself. Bewilderment, claustrophobia, pessimism, compassion, tranquility, realization. It is a reminder that the real world is surreal enough in itself (Charles Burnett's masterpiece of filmmaking,
The Killer of Sheep, which I will touch on at a later date, is an example of a work from another genre that captures that impression perfectly). What has attracted me to so-called Science Fiction is indeed that abstract center of sensation and feeling. I will never forget opening up
John Brunner's Jagged Orbit to see that the first page was nothing but "I-," and the second page was nothing but "solationism." I think it even gave me goosebumps. Another obvious example is of course
Samuel Delany's
Dhalgren, which pulls the reader into a psychosexual, sense-bombarding, world of confusion not unlike our own samsara, with a touch of
Maldoror. I once talked to someone about this book who complained about the fact that nothing "happens," nor is anything solved or resolved. I believe she missed the point. Getting back to Butler, the reason she is on the mind is because I have been listening to
Nicole Mitchell's tribute to her,
Xe
nogenesis Suite, and really digging it. I was admittedly disappointed in Mitchell's last album,
Black Unstoppable, because her recordings up till then were so uniquely her sound, using uncommon instrumentation to create a flowing yet angular, inspirited experience, but
Unstoppable felt locked in by forms.
Xenogenesis is pure magic. Even if the listener is not familiar with the source material, the music will take he or she into that very feeling I described above. There is transcendence, (re)connection, and catharsis. If only Octavia Butler were around to hear it. I envision her listening to it at home in isolation, her eyes enlivened with the knowledge that her creation in turn inspired another beautiful creation.