326 reviews for:

Dreamsnake

Vonda N. McIntyre

3.8 AVERAGE

adventurous emotional tense slow-paced
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

4.5
I absolutely loved the first 80% of this book. Some events in the last fifth were harder to stomach.
However, overall this has to be my favourite fantasy book revolving around a female character. Snake is smart and warm-hearted but still fallible. Through her eyes, intimate relationships, victimhood, the way a young woman who has not made many negative experiences with people early on moves through the world, and power dynamics are cast into a light I find more truthful than most of what I've read so far. Gently, without creating utopia, McIntyre challenges common patterns of thinking.

I read a piece that Ursula LeGuin wrote about [b:Dreamsnake|263021|Dreamsnake|Vonda N. McIntyre|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1440756641l/263021._SY75_.jpg|254960] that was published in her book [b:Words Are My Matter: Writings About Life and Books, 2000–2016, with A Journal of a Writer's Week|29363335|Words Are My Matter Writings About Life and Books, 2000–2016, with A Journal of a Writer's Week|Ursula K. Le Guin|https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1470694965l/29363335._SX50_.jpg|49608748]. LeGuin calls the book “beautiful, powerful, and highly entertaining”. With which I agree. She points out that there is one character in the book, Merideth, whose gender is never revealed. LeGuin pictured Merideth as male and I pictured Merideth as female. Very interesting.
This is biological science fiction. The main character, Snake, is a healer in a system that uses snakes. There is biofeedback, gene splicing, etc. in the story. Dreamsnake is an adventure story with a young woman as the main character. She faces moral and intellectual as well as physical challenges.
Enjoyable!

In the centuries since the world was blasted by nuclear war, the practice of medicine had made some unusual developments. Snake is a healer. In addition to medicines, her little black bag contains three living instruments: a cobra, a rattlesnake, and an alien reptile called a dreamsnake. The dreamsnake can provide an anesthetic effect on a patient as well as pleasant and comforting dreams. But when a superstitious and fearful desert tribe kills her dreamsnake, Snake must go on a quest to find another of the rare creatures.

Snake’s adventures won McIntyre science fiction’s highest awards the Nebula, Hugo, and Locus for best novel when it was first published.

Great book. McIntyre created an interesting world about healers using alien snakes to heal others. Her working with biology, motherhood, and gender roles is really natural and forward thinking. I really enjoyed this book and the adventure that Snake went on and the innate strength of her character.

Post-apocalyptic fantasy with magic snakes and true love- it's as though McIntyre wrote it for me. I wish I'd read it in the late 70s, when it was new. I found the story to be a bit dated stylistically but very absorbing and nicely done.

Wonderful. Why had I never heard of McIntyre?
adventurous emotional hopeful inspiring tense fast-paced
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: Complicated

No recuerdo quién me descubrió Serpiente del sueño, solo sé que me dijo: serpientes y sexo. Y compré. Ya ves que no hace falta mucho para convencerme de leer algo. Luego llegó todo lo demás. Porque Serpiente del sueño es mucho más que serpientes y sexo. Es toda una declaración de intenciones y al mismo tiempo sutil, pero que te deja clara una cosa: no hay ningún impedimento para que un personaje femenino no pueda ser tan protagonista y tan bueno como uno masculino. La frase aquella de Sam Lundwall, “Los roles sexuales en la ciencia ficción son tan inalterables como el metal del casco de la nave espacial, y la emancipación una palabra desconocida”, quedaba por completo invalidada.

Serpiente nos acompañará durante toda la novela en un mundo asolado (podría ser el nuestro, pero no queda claro y por lo que he leído McIntyre tampoco ha llegado nunca a desvelarlo), donde las montañas se intercalan con los desiertos y las grandes urbes se aíslan. Serpiente es una curadora, está en su año de prueba y ha decidido viajar al desierto para ejercer su oficio. Allí encontrará a Stavin, un niño con un grave tumor al que tendrá que salvar la vida con ayuda de sus tres serpientes: Susurro, Silencio y Sombra (Mist, Grass y Sand en el original, pero por petición de la autora en la traducción se evitó la literalidad para que los nombres tuvieran un sonido siseante). Pero también descubrirá que las gentes del desierto tienen costumbres diferentes a las suyas, no dicen su nombre a cualquiera y temen a las serpientes. Su error provocará la muerte de una de sus compañeras y la obligará a emprender un largo viaje para hacerse con otra de las escasas serpientes del sueño, ofidios alienígenas cuyo veneno funciona como un sedante.

Es una novela de viajes y aventuras, quizá un esquema tan repetido que, casi cuarenta años después, es posible que se vea un poco resentida. Pero McIntyre no elige las aventuras al azar, sino que les da un sentido y un significado que hacen del viaje algo anecdótico, una excusa para ir más allá y mostrarnos algo más. Por ello esta obra es tan interesante, por el mensaje que tiene y lo bien expuesto que está. La autora hace gala de una prosa fluida para dibujar los paisajes y las costumbres de las distintas agrupaciones que Serpiente irá encontrando a su paso y con ello va conformando también la complejidad interior de la protagonista. McIntyre demuestra que se puede hacer una ciencia ficción diferente, comprometida y que llegue al público sin caer en estereotipos o panfletos propagandísticos.

Reseña completa: https://lanaveinvisible.wordpress.com/2017/03/11/resena-serpiente-del-sueno/

adventurous inspiring tense medium-paced
Strong character development: Yes
Loveable characters: Yes
Diverse cast of characters: Yes
Flaws of characters a main focus: No

This was a very good read! So unique and inclusive, especially for a novel published in the 70s! The world building was excellent, and I loved the protagonist and every choice she made. This is an excellent story that is absolutely worth checking out :)