


But it was two writing workshops that she took in 1970 - the Open Door Workshop of the Screenwriter’s Guild of America (West) and the Clarion Science Fiction Writers Workshop - that seem to have been the catalyst that set her on her way to becoming one of the first successful African American women science fiction writers.

When she was 12, she began writing science fiction. Shy, poor, bored, and lonely, Butler took up writing at age 10 as a means of escape. Her father, a shoeshine man, died when she was young, and she was raised by her mother, who worked as a maid. Octavia Estelle Butler was born on June 22, 1947, in Pasadena, California. Butler dies after falling and striking her head outside her home in Lake Forest Park on February 24, 2006. She suffers from hypertension and writer’s block during most of her years in Seattle and does not write during that time, but in 20 writes Fledgling, her final novel, which is published in the autumn of 2005 to considerable praise. Butler, one of the few African American women to achieve significant success as a science-fiction writer, has already had a dozen books published over the prior 20 years, and shortly after her arrival in Seattle receives a Nebula Award for her book Parable of the Talents. In 1999, science-fiction writer Octavia Butler (1947-2006) moves to Seattle.
