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Science Fiction Festival Returns To Pasadena School Named For Octavia E. Butler

A mural of a woman with dark skin tone and short curly hair looks out over a hallway lined with lockers. The name Octavia E. Butler is written in yellow on a teal background.
Robert Quintana painted this mural of Octavia E. Butler outside the school library in 2020. Among Butler's writing on the wall is the phrase "So be it. See to it." which has becomes the school's unofficial motto.
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Mariana Dale
/
LAist
)
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The middle school once attended by — and eventually renamed for — the author Octavia E. Butler will hold its third Science Fiction Festival on Friday.

The multi-award winning and best selling author graduated from what was then Washington Junior High in 1962 and wrote some of her earliest stories while a student.

School librarian Natalie Daily organized the Octavia E. Butler Magnet’s first science fiction writing contest in 2020, the same year the school’s library was renamed in her honor. The school itself was renamed two years later.

Octavia E. Butler Library Science Fiction Festival
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“I want [students] to realize that their ideas matter,” Daily said. “I think that Butler is a testament to that, you know, she was writing stuff and thinking about really, really deep ideas when she was a student here.”

A woman with light skin tone, shoulder-length curly hair and glasses stands in a room filled with books. There is a chalk mural overhead of a woman with dark skin tone and short curly hair surrounded by space.
"It kind of sometimes feels like her eyes are watching you," librarian Natalie Daily said of the chalk portrait of Butler by Bianca Ornelas in the library. "I just kind of think, would I be making a space that she would have liked?"
(
Mariana Dale
/
LAist
)

In 2022, the school expanded the contest into the first Science Fiction Festival.

“It's just ways for kids to be engaged in both science and art, and creation,” Daily said. “To see themselves as part of all of it.”

Students and families can learn how to code robots, talk to an astronomer, create space-inspired art, and might even spot their favorite Star Wars character.

“Last year, the fungal expert was such a hit,” Daily said. “I had to have them back this year because the kids just thought it was so cool to see all those different weird mushrooms.”

The festival will also reveal the winners of the 2023-2024 science fiction contest. The now- annual school-wide competition includes art, short narrative, poetry, and graphic fiction.

A new generation of science fiction creators

LAist caught up with a few of the students who’d won first place in their respective categories in 2022 and will graduate later this year.

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Then-sixth grader Brooklyn Roffman wrote a poem called “Savages” that imagines aliens demeaning earthlings the way European colonists did Native Americans.

“I wrote it and then I had a lot of thoughts about it — mostly negative thoughts,” Roffman said. “So then I just changed it, like, word by word.”

Her revisions paid off — she won first prize in the poetry category.

“It felt amazing,” Roffman said. “I put a lot of work into it and it felt really good to do something right for once.”

Dayana Diaz wrote a short story about people who built a life on Mars and a war with Jupiter that threatens to destroy it.

“It's similar to Earth — although it's, like, obviously not the same at all,” Diaz said. “It still has the same, like, beauty to it.”

Diaz said she was inspired by research about the possibility of sustaining life on the red planet.

“I feel like there's a good possibility that we could go there one day, and I would like that to happen,” Diaz said.

When she found out she won first prize, Diaz said she was surprised, happy, but also a little bit nervous.

“It just made me realize that I actually really do like writing,” Diaz said. “Like I should write a little more.”

Maxine Molnar’s winning illustration shows a girl standing on a cliff looking out over a receding ocean. A spaceship and red sedan float above the water. Dots of color in the distance imply an airborne freeway.

“I learned more about endangered coral reefs, and I discovered how much I love to draw in perspective,” Molnar said.

Molnar said middle school has been full of opportunities to learn — academically — and about herself.

“I've explored more of, like, what I enjoy doing,” Molnar said. “What I'm really good at and things that I also need to work on.”

Learn more about Octavia E. Butler Magnet got its name
  • Next week, we’ll be back with a recap of the Science Fiction Festival (and our new favorite fungus?) and more on the school's relationship with Butler.

LAist reporter Mariana Dale wants your help telling stories about K-12 education

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