Reviews

Dreamsnake by Vonda N. McIntyre

dreamgalaxies's review

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3.0

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I love the unique premise of this book and how McIntyre combines elements of dystopia and utopia in the post-apocalyptic. The love story made me cringe out of my skin, though (they don't even know each other!) and there are some dated things going on here--no surprise since it's from the 70s.

humanignorance's review

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2.0

2.5 stars. The book started out too slow and descriptive. It picked up the pace a third in, and became relatively engaging from that point on. Nevertheless, there were several serious problems. The world was intriguing but insufficiently explored. The mother-daughter relationship was really well done, but the romance was woefully inadequate. The ending felt very contrived and was far too abrupt.

kbhenrickson's review against another edition

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adventurous hopeful medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.0

This was better than I expected. The setting is very interesting - I’d love to have learned more about the world - and I really liked the characters of Snake and Melissa (and Snake’s relationship with her actual snakes). While I didn’t love the ending, I was really glad that
Snake was able to save herself and Melissa, and the male “love interest” character didn’t show up at the last minute to save the day, even though he was there to help them after.

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hank's review

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3.0

As others have said, 70's through and through although don't ask me to explain what that means, mostly dialog and what I think of as flatness of world building.

An interesting start trying to figure out who and what Snake is and then it morphs into a sort of traveling adventure story like Gulliver's Travels or The Wizard of Oz. In fact there is a fairly blatant homage to The Wizard of Oz in the middle of the book which I will let others find for themselves.

Snake is the kind of person I have tried to grow up to be (still working on it), easy going, easy to forgive slights against herself yet inflexible when she sees a wrong that needs to be corrected.

Nothing was very extraordinary about this book which is why it got an ordinary rating. The plot was very straight forward, the life lessons very unambiguous and simple, the characters un-nuanced. I also don't like fantasies masquerading as sci-fi. Sure this was a post apocalyptic setup with lost science and technology but mostly this was pure fantasy.

Definitely better than most 70's "sci-fi" but I have enjoyed recent novels more.

suzemo's review

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4.0

3.5 stars, but if I had read it when I was younger (and I wish I had), it would be a 5 star book to me.

Snake is a healer on a post-apocalyptic Earth, off on her proving tour through the desert-lands, where healers typically do not travel. Along the way she has a mishap and she must then travel (first to her home, but then to a big City) do her best to right what has happened. Along the way she has a greater journey to a discovery that will (probably) forever benefit the healers in the future, and also makes personal gains.

The book is a bit dated, with flavors of the time period when it was written. Free sexuality (and total internal birth control)and less patriarchal norms is something that was probably more interesting at the time. However, it's still a good novel with a good story; McIntyre shows that a sci-fi fantasy novel doesn't need to be 700 pages and describe everything in painful detail to be good.

I like that in this post-apocalyptic world, there's a mix of primitive tribalism and hard-living survival right along with genetic manipulation and biotechnology that's commonplace. You get a glimpse of a city that is technologically advanced, but forbidden to "outsiders" and you hear of off-worlders (whether they are pre-apocalypse terrans that made it to the stars or aliens is unclear), so the world is varied and interesting.

I guess some people would want to have a lot of their questions answered (what happened to Earth to cause the nuclear war that has so scarred the land, how have these different people formed, what's with the domes and the "alien" life forms in them, what's with the City, what's with the offworlders, how did the technology become dispersed, what was the pre-war/nuclear world like, etc.), but I quite enjoyed the glimpse into this world as an observer with Snake on her journey.

ac_lytle's review against another edition

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adventurous medium-paced

3.25

kathrinpassig's review

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3.0

Ich habe erst nach dem Lesen gemerkt, dass es ein Buch aus den 1970er Jahren ist. Manches hat mich gestört, die postapokalyptische Welt überzeugt mich nicht (alle üben irgendwelche mittelalterlichen Berufe aus, aber es gibt Solarzellen und Genmanipulation), die Dialoge sind wie von Zehnjährigen geschrieben, der Endgegner und der Kampf mit ihm wirken im Vergleich zum Rest lustlos und eilig hingeschrieben. Aber es war schön, zur Abwechslung mal ein Buch zu lesen, in dem die Protagonistin hauptsächlich ihrem Beruf nachgeht und dabei erwachsen handelt, durchdachte Entscheidungen trifft und sich extrem um Höflichkeit und Rücksichtnahme bemüht.

Ich muss ein paar Wochen später noch ergänzen, dass eine Stelle drin war, an die ich oft und bewundernd denke. Etwa in der Mitte des Buchs passieren zwei Dinge: Snake kommt an das Tor einer wichtigen Stadt und wird abgewiesen. Sie sucht in einer nahen Höhle Schutz vor dem Sturm und beobachtet ein großes Tier, das in einem Felsspalt am Ende der Höhle verschwindet. Und danach passiert das, was jetzt passieren muss, einfach überhaupt nicht.

matthewbrand's review

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5.0

I loved this story! Such a unique story and a surreal feel to it. Describing the plot, it sounds kind of stupid. But the story is more just about a great character that is Snake. I love that they don't fully explain everything. Just get some glimpses into the world.

blairconrad's review

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3.0

Started strong, I thought, but ultimately introduced a few concepts and plot threads that didn't go anywhere, weakening the story. I wanted either more time to develop them, or for them to not have been teased.

lauralauralaura's review against another edition

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4.0

I resisted the hell out of reading this book, because the cover art for every edition is corny as hell. And then I really enjoyed this heroes journey; the world building hangs together, the character development (mostly) makes sense, with people making choices that are, on the surface, irrational, and that deeply connect to the values they have. I will read more by this author.