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Original Title: Dreamsnake
ISBN: 0553296590 (ISBN13: 9780553296594)
Edition Language: English
Characters: Snake
Literary Awards: Hugo Award for Best Novel (1979), Nebula Award for Best Novel (1978), Locus Award for Best Novel (1979), Ditmar Award Nominee for Best International Long Fiction (1979), James Tiptree Jr. Award Nominee for Classics (1995) National Book Award Finalist for Science Fiction (Paperback) (1980)
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Dreamsnake Paperback | Pages: 312 pages
Rating: 3.86 | 8781 Users | 470 Reviews

Identify Containing Books Dreamsnake

Title:Dreamsnake
Author:Vonda N. McIntyre
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 312 pages
Published:September 1st 1994 by Spectra Books (first published March 1978)
Categories:Science Fiction. Fantasy. Fiction. Apocalyptic. Post Apocalyptic. Hugo Awards

Interpretation Conducive To Books Dreamsnake

While this book gets docked a point or two for the cheesy 70s cover and the title, it deserves a place among the classics of the genre. I first read the Nebula-winning novella "Of Mist, And Grass, And Sand," in middle school, but I never realized that McIntyre had expanded it to novel length. It's a thoughtful adventure, a quest led by a mature and confident heroine, Snake. I love her as a character: she knows who she is, she is good at what she does, and she is comfortable in her own skin. I also love that this book is not your typical post-apocalyptic nightmare. It takes place so long after a nuclear catastrophe that society has rebuilt itself, albeit in a very different form. This lets McIntyre present us with a familiar but somewhat alien landscape, advanced and regressive technology, humans acting human but according to slightly different societal rules, all with lots of room to explore. While there are a couple of elements that seem as dated as the cover, all in all I thought McIntyre did a beautiful job of expanding that original story into the larger tale told here.

Rating Containing Books Dreamsnake
Ratings: 3.86 From 8781 Users | 470 Reviews

Commentary Containing Books Dreamsnake
I thought the first chapter, which was originally an independent short story, was really lovely and moving. I enjoyed the world-building of the whole book a lot, especially the open attitudes toward sexuality and the use of snakes for medicine, and I thought the way the story slowly opened up to reveal more and more about the setting was wonderfully done. However, I was a bit let down by where the story went in the second half, and I found the fact that a main antagonist was (view spoiler)[a

While this book gets docked a point or two for the cheesy 70s cover and the title, it deserves a place among the classics of the genre. I first read the Nebula-winning novella "Of Mist, And Grass, And Sand," in middle school, but I never realized that McIntyre had expanded it to novel length. It's a thoughtful adventure, a quest led by a mature and confident heroine, Snake. I love her as a character: she knows who she is, she is good at what she does, and she is comfortable in her own skin. I

I wouldn't have read Dreamsnake without one of my groups on GR reading it, I think. It's not something I would've come across otherwise, but I'm glad I did. It reminded me, in tone, of The Steerswoman (Rosemary Kirstein), and like The Steerswoman, it has a mature female main character who gets done whatever needs to be got done in her field, without too much fear of outsiders.I liked the world built up in glimpses, here: way post-apocalyptic event, a whole different sort of living... the hints

In Dreamsnake, Vonda McIntyre tells a captivating and moving story about a healer, Snake, and her quest to find a new dreamsnake after the death of her first, Grass. Along the way, she meets a man, adopts a young girl, travels great distances, and overcomes many hardships, physical and emotional. She proves herself to be honorable, strong, wise, and the kind of character a reader can really care about. The relationship that develops between Snake and Melissa, the young girl she adopts, is deep

As with all post-apocalyptic books by women, this one has a wonderful gentle tone. Maybe it is because men always cause the destruction of the world. So their story must be a redemptive one. The stories by/about women are much more about healing and remembering.

So hard to review a book that I loved so much as a teenager, and still read through rose-coloured glasses. And again with the crossover - although this reads very much like high fantasy, and that's what you'd probably think it was from the blurb, it's really a far-future post-apocalyptic sci-fi. It's also super-typical seventies feminist fiction (for both the good and the bad that brings). Snake, the protagonist, is a healer, using a curious mixture of what at first glance seems like shamanistic

This book is classic seventies feminist sci-fi. It is also slow and meandering. It explores some interesting social issues. It is nothing special in my opinion, but it was a fun read. I liked the main character. Her name was Snake and she used.yepyou guessed itsnakes to heal people. Scary snakes. Cobras and rattlers and snakes that I personally do not want anywhere near me. She was pretty tough and knew what she wanted. She had a few annoying moments, but was mostly a pretty good lead character.
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