Dreamsnake: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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(Import from TV Tropes TVT:Main.Dreamsnake 2012-07-01, editor history TVTH:Main.Dreamsnake, CC-BY-SA 3.0 Unported license)
 
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* [[Town With a Dark Secret]]
* [[Town With a Dark Secret]]
* [[We Will Have Euthanasia in The Future]].
* [[We Will Have Euthanasia in The Future]].
* [[What Measure Is a Non Cute]]: Mountainside is ''made'' of this trope. Melissa's burn scars{{spoiler|—earned in an act of heroism, at the age of ''eight''—}}make so much of a social outcast out of her that when her foster father verbally abuses her in front of the mayor, the mayor ''argues that it's for her own good''. {{spoiler|It takes the revelation that he's been molesting her for him to be declared unfit.}}
* [[What Measure Is a Non-Cute?]]: Mountainside is ''made'' of this trope. Melissa's burn scars{{spoiler|—earned in an act of heroism, at the age of ''eight''—}}make so much of a social outcast out of her that when her foster father verbally abuses her in front of the mayor, the mayor ''argues that it's for her own good''. {{spoiler|It takes the revelation that he's been molesting her for him to be declared unfit.}}


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Revision as of 11:20, 9 January 2014

Now be a good boy and take your medicine. (The feeder's photo by FireFail.)


Dreamsnake is a 1978 Science Fiction novel written by Vonda N. McIntyre.

Snake is a traveling healer, using the chemically-altered venom of her pet vipers to treat various ills in a somewhat undefined postapocalyptic setting. And early in the story, a well-meaning but paranoid and misinformed individual kills the titular animal... which just so happens to be both important to her job and incredibly rare. As the only alternative is to come back to her teachers and almost certainly end her healer's career, Snake decides to try to find out something which no one had been able to discover: the natural source of dreamsnakes. During her travel she is forced to make difficult ethical decisions, which subtly introduce an element of An Aesop and comment on some problems brought to light in The Seventies.


Contains examples of: