Submitted by Pink_Blue1214 t3_11v15wt in books
I know Mary Sue is a pretty hot term, so don’t get me wrong - I love Butler, I love the books, I’m not trying to be accusatory or anything, but want to see if anyone has had similar thoughts.
I’m teaching an intro to literature course at a college that has assigned “Parable of the Sower” as the departmental read - so now matter what you’re teaching you have to fit it in your course somewhere. My students, in general, like the book and it’s theming. But don’t like Lauren. They find her hyper-empathy confusing (feel as if she picks and chooses when it affects her) and have trouble liking/connect with her.
I’m presently reading “Parable of the Talents” and I’ve found myself thinking that perhaps my students don’t like Lauren too much because she’s a bit Mary Sue-ish. A bit too perfect (smart, charismatic, natural leader), seems to be smarter than everyone around her, portrayed as the only character who really GETS what’s going on in the world, and is without any real character flaw (can we argue that the hyper empathy is a character flaw? It’s a drawback, sure, but it also provides advantages - and it is nonetheless a flaw that has nothing to do with Lauren’s personality, so nothing about Lauren’s inner being is imperfect)
I’d be interested in hearing if other people have had these thoughts about Lauren, or have had trouble connecting to her. Or if I’m just an outlier and people think she’s awesome!
Express_Papaya_5221 t1_jcqx7ac wrote
I agree on her being something of a Mary Sue, reading Sower I got the sense that she's an idealized version of the author herself. You could argue with the diary-style format that it's part of the main character's personality to exaggerate her insight and competence like a know-it-all teen might in her own journal. But there is nothing in the book to suggest that this is a conscious ploy that gets any sort of payoff.
I had countless issues with this book and only finished it because of how it keeps coming up in this forum.