Dawn (Lilith's Brood, 1)
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Description
When Lilith lyapo wakes from a centuries-long sleep, she finds herself aboard the vast spaceship of the Oankali. She discovers that the Oankali—a seemingly benevolent alien race—intervened in the fate of the humanity hundreds of years ago, saving everyone who survived a nuclear war from a dying, ruined Earth and then putting them into a deep sleep. After learning all they could about Earth and its beings, the Oankali healed the planet, cured cancer, increased human strength, and they now want Lilith to lead her people back to Earth—but salvation comes at a price.
Hopeful and thought-provoking, this post-apocalyptic narrative deftly explores gender and race through the eyes of characters struggling to adapt during a pivotal time of crisis and change.
Book Information
Posts
Interessante Idee, phasenweise sehr langfädig
Lilith wacht in einem Raum auf, sie ist alleine und weiss nicht wo sie ist. Sie kanm sich nur daran erinnern, dass die Bombem gefallen sind. Bald wird klar, dass sie sich in der Gewalt von Aliens befindet. Mit der Zeit zeigen sich diese Wesen und sie gewöhnt sich an sie. Ihr wird sogar in Aussicht gestellt mit einer Gruppe Menschen zurück auf die Erde zu gehen. Die Aliens haben die Erde wieder erneuert und scheinen helfen zu wollen. Doch dafür ist ein Preis fällig. Wollte schon immer mal was von Butler lesen, und die Prämisse hat mich gereizt. Phasenweise ist es sehr interessant und unterhaltsam, oft aber auch etwas langfädig und gar kompliziert. Werde bestimmt mal weiterlesen, aber nicht all zu bald.
A new beginning for humanity
The book is primarily dedicated to the topic of recolonising the earth after humans have finally destroyed it. The focus is on a woman in her mid-twenties who is chosen by an alien species to prepare herself and other people who have survived the destruction of Earth for a new life on Earth. The story is not exciting, but at least it is interestingly written and poses many questions about the themes of alien domination, xenophobia and the desire to do something good. As this is only the first part of the trilogy, I am already looking forward to the second.
This is my live review as I read the book. Part 1 - Chapter One. Very boring. A woman trapped in a room alone talking to herself and wondering why she is there. I am probably not going to finish this book unless I force myself to do so out of boredom.... Chapter Two. The woman is being held by aliens on a spaceship. The book is still boring, but the alien has tentacles growing out of his body that the woman thought was his hair at first. "I'll only talk to you if you look at me." the alien says. This is really gross. It makes me think he has a sexual intention, and I don't want to read about that.... "I'm here to teach you to be comfortable with us.," he says. Chapter Three. It's giving me a skin crawly feeling. She is supposed to go to sleep while the weird alien man is in the room. I didn't know what this book was going to be when I started reading it, but the woman is saying "Stay like that. Let me come close and look at you like that." If this were a romance novel they would start "kissing" and then have tentacle sex. I am imagining myself in this situation and I would be clawing at the walls to get away. I guess I don't like this book and need to stop reading it now. This is making me think that people write books to express how they feel. I am thinking that the person who wrote this book thought about what it's like to touch a squid looking alien man. She was so unsatisfied with her human male relations on Earth that she needed that. This is making me wonder if there is a porn version of the movie ET. Chapter Four. The alien goes to the bathroom and the woman wonders what he does in there. Um...when he comes out of the bathroom he gives her a banana, but the book does not say where he got it from. Chapter Five. Crossbreading is discussed. Making alien-human babies! The alien is her captor, but she is talking to him like he is a new friend or "boyfriend." They are walking around outside the ship holding hands. Part one ends with her being given the choice to die, or go forward with the making babies with aliens concept. (Tentacle alien babies....) Part 2 - Chapter One He brings her home to meet his family. At this point the reader should have bought into the whole premise of the book and decided to just go along with the story and not question things. So this is a totally normal meet the parents dinner moment. Nothing unusual, everyone's parents are ailens. I'll stop writing about/reading the book here because I am sure everything that comes after is going to be just as stupid, but I would just have to accept it if I am still reading. I mean you can't argue about everything in the book being stupid, but keep reading it. That makes you stupid. The End
Well, I enjoyed this more than Fledgling, which is to say I'm grateful I read this, at least a little bit. I tend to avoid science fiction, as it just isn't my cup of juice. This book felt flat and dull in some parts and rushed in others. The characters and plot, while having potential, were not as fully fleshed out as I was hoping for. Is every Octavia E. Butler book going to be like this? Although, I will say that the politics and political undertones and the ways they were brought up were well-done and I did enjoy reading those parts.
Description
When Lilith lyapo wakes from a centuries-long sleep, she finds herself aboard the vast spaceship of the Oankali. She discovers that the Oankali—a seemingly benevolent alien race—intervened in the fate of the humanity hundreds of years ago, saving everyone who survived a nuclear war from a dying, ruined Earth and then putting them into a deep sleep. After learning all they could about Earth and its beings, the Oankali healed the planet, cured cancer, increased human strength, and they now want Lilith to lead her people back to Earth—but salvation comes at a price.
Hopeful and thought-provoking, this post-apocalyptic narrative deftly explores gender and race through the eyes of characters struggling to adapt during a pivotal time of crisis and change.
Book Information
Posts
Interessante Idee, phasenweise sehr langfädig
Lilith wacht in einem Raum auf, sie ist alleine und weiss nicht wo sie ist. Sie kanm sich nur daran erinnern, dass die Bombem gefallen sind. Bald wird klar, dass sie sich in der Gewalt von Aliens befindet. Mit der Zeit zeigen sich diese Wesen und sie gewöhnt sich an sie. Ihr wird sogar in Aussicht gestellt mit einer Gruppe Menschen zurück auf die Erde zu gehen. Die Aliens haben die Erde wieder erneuert und scheinen helfen zu wollen. Doch dafür ist ein Preis fällig. Wollte schon immer mal was von Butler lesen, und die Prämisse hat mich gereizt. Phasenweise ist es sehr interessant und unterhaltsam, oft aber auch etwas langfädig und gar kompliziert. Werde bestimmt mal weiterlesen, aber nicht all zu bald.
A new beginning for humanity
The book is primarily dedicated to the topic of recolonising the earth after humans have finally destroyed it. The focus is on a woman in her mid-twenties who is chosen by an alien species to prepare herself and other people who have survived the destruction of Earth for a new life on Earth. The story is not exciting, but at least it is interestingly written and poses many questions about the themes of alien domination, xenophobia and the desire to do something good. As this is only the first part of the trilogy, I am already looking forward to the second.
This is my live review as I read the book. Part 1 - Chapter One. Very boring. A woman trapped in a room alone talking to herself and wondering why she is there. I am probably not going to finish this book unless I force myself to do so out of boredom.... Chapter Two. The woman is being held by aliens on a spaceship. The book is still boring, but the alien has tentacles growing out of his body that the woman thought was his hair at first. "I'll only talk to you if you look at me." the alien says. This is really gross. It makes me think he has a sexual intention, and I don't want to read about that.... "I'm here to teach you to be comfortable with us.," he says. Chapter Three. It's giving me a skin crawly feeling. She is supposed to go to sleep while the weird alien man is in the room. I didn't know what this book was going to be when I started reading it, but the woman is saying "Stay like that. Let me come close and look at you like that." If this were a romance novel they would start "kissing" and then have tentacle sex. I am imagining myself in this situation and I would be clawing at the walls to get away. I guess I don't like this book and need to stop reading it now. This is making me think that people write books to express how they feel. I am thinking that the person who wrote this book thought about what it's like to touch a squid looking alien man. She was so unsatisfied with her human male relations on Earth that she needed that. This is making me wonder if there is a porn version of the movie ET. Chapter Four. The alien goes to the bathroom and the woman wonders what he does in there. Um...when he comes out of the bathroom he gives her a banana, but the book does not say where he got it from. Chapter Five. Crossbreading is discussed. Making alien-human babies! The alien is her captor, but she is talking to him like he is a new friend or "boyfriend." They are walking around outside the ship holding hands. Part one ends with her being given the choice to die, or go forward with the making babies with aliens concept. (Tentacle alien babies....) Part 2 - Chapter One He brings her home to meet his family. At this point the reader should have bought into the whole premise of the book and decided to just go along with the story and not question things. So this is a totally normal meet the parents dinner moment. Nothing unusual, everyone's parents are ailens. I'll stop writing about/reading the book here because I am sure everything that comes after is going to be just as stupid, but I would just have to accept it if I am still reading. I mean you can't argue about everything in the book being stupid, but keep reading it. That makes you stupid. The End
Well, I enjoyed this more than Fledgling, which is to say I'm grateful I read this, at least a little bit. I tend to avoid science fiction, as it just isn't my cup of juice. This book felt flat and dull in some parts and rushed in others. The characters and plot, while having potential, were not as fully fleshed out as I was hoping for. Is every Octavia E. Butler book going to be like this? Although, I will say that the politics and political undertones and the ways they were brought up were well-done and I did enjoy reading those parts.







