Octavia E. Butler was an only child. Her mother was a maid and her father was a shoeshine man who died when Butler was seven. Her family were devout Baptists, and were very poor. Butler showed an early interest in science fiction and began writing in childhood. She attended Pasadena City College at night, graduating with an associate of arts degree in History. She later enrolled in writing classes at Cal State LA, UCLA extension school, and the Clarion Science Fiction Writers Workshop. In 1984, Butler’s short story “Speech Sounds” won the Hugo Short Story Award, and the following year her collection of short stories,
Bloodchild, won the Nebula and Hugo Awards as well as other prizes. In 1995, Butler won a MacArthur Fellowship. Many of Butler’s novels—including
The Parable of the Sower, its sequel
The Parable of the Talents, and the neo-slave narrative
Kindred—are considered to be among the most important works of 20th century American literature. Despite this, Butler spent most of her life in poverty and was forced to work several jobs in order to survive, waking up to write in the middle of the night. She also suffered from depression. She died suddenly from a fall at only 58; it is not clear whether the cause of her death was a stroke, whether she died as a result of head injuries from the fall, or whether it was a combination of both.