I
acquired Vonda N. McIntyre’s Dreamsnake
based on strong desire. Prior to
purchasing the 1979 novel, I had spent a long weekend hiking in the sun. Arriving home and picking up Ben Bova’s The Best of Analog thinking to read a
few pages before falling asleep, all too quickly I was caught up in McIntyre’s
novelette “Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand”.
And when I did read the last word—after midnight, it was with
frustration. The story of Snake so
effectively balancing empathy and plot, I wanted desperately to know what
happened after the healing in the village.
Where did her journey take her?
Did she ever return from wandering the radiation scarred land? And ultimately, was she able to replace the
one item an ignorant couple had all too easily deprived her of? Despite its fairy tale elements and
big-button morals, Dreamsnake (1978)
extends the story to novel length and answers these questions in quality
fashion.
“Of
Mist, and Grass, and Sand” forms the opening chapters of Dreamsnake. Attending to a
boy with a tumor lodged in his stomach, it tells of a night in the life of a
healer named Snake. The tools of her
trade non-standard to say the least, the three snakes she keeps in a basket
each perform a role in the curative process.
The boy frightened—but not nearly as much as his parents, he submits
himself to Snake’s peculiar requests, and endures the pain she asks of him in
preparation for the cure. Preparing this
cure an esoteric process, the sacrifices made test everyone involved—perhaps
Snake the most. But when catastrophe
strikes while effecting the prepared drug, Snake is left to pick up the pieces
and wonder what her future holds.
For
anyone interested in Dreamsnake, I
highly recommend reading the story “Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand” first. If you like it, you will probably like the
novel. Though intensity and purpose sway
a little in the middle section, McIntyre finishes the novel in relatively
consistent fashion. Written in the same
brooding style, readers do indeed learn of what happens to Snake in her
wanderings, and whether or not she is able to recover the invaluable item which
has been lost to her—Snake herself developing in the process.
Few
bothered with J.K. Rowling, Vernor Vinge, or Robert J. Sawyer winning the Hugo,
it is thus for obvious reasons some take issue with McIntyre’s book. Dreamsnake
cited by some as the worst Hugo winner of all time, it would seem the brooding
prose, the flawed protagonist, and the book’s moral objectives, as opposed to
simple entertainment written in transparent text of the aforementioned authors,
are too much for some readers to handle.
McIntyre spoon-feeding only the middle of the narrative, the novel
requires some engagement and introspection at the beginning and end for its
value to be uncovered. Not the greatest
ever written, the book nevertheless is a more deserving winner than many who
claim the award, and is thus strongly undeserving of the negative criticism.
And
there is value. Dreamsnake a personal story, it is at heart Snake’s finding her
place in life. A healer, locating this
place naturally brings her to not only some of the most gruesome injuries and
illnesses—all which test her fortitude and training to varying degrees. Likewise, it brings her to situations which
require patience, wisdom, and the development of her social skills. Though partially a Mary Sue, McIntyre
presents the associated doubts, misgivings, and perceived failures from inside
Snake’s head clearly. Life not always
fair, she does her best with what she can.
Hurt by what is lost, she is strong enough to continue. Another aspect of Snake that McIntyre
capitalizes on is her status as female healer.
Not as overtly a feminist text as some of Tiptree Jr. or Le Guin’s
works, the author nevertheless gives her female lead agency through healing. Not a ‘shoot first, ask questions later’ kind
of girl, readers will find Snake’s manner of problem solving to possess more
integrity than the average sci-fi hero.
It
wouldn’t be a review of Dreamsnake if
one were not to get into the ethics under discussion. One of the largest sub-texts of the book, the
middle section in particular becomes more episodic than linear. Super emo girl, Snake comes upon a variety of
scenarios and situations with Big Moral Buttons. Child abuse, euthanasia, tyranny, thievery,
kidnapping, and a few other rather obvious immoralities appear for
examination. Using her self-confidence
and powers as healer, Snake sets to doing her best to make all these situations
better. Some readers will be engaged by
the ensuing melodrama, while others will wish McIntyre had narrowed down the
list of Buttons, and perhaps chosen one that integrated with Snake’s own
development in order to progress her own story.
This middle section an ignorable bridge, I will leave anything further
for the reader to discover.
What
makes “Of Mist, and Grass, and Sand” and Aztecs
good writing is the openness of their denouements. Eschewing this, in Dreamsnake McIntyre hints at a fairy tale ending in the early going,
and indeed, that’s is the result. This
is not to say happy endings are bad, rather that in this case it undermines the
burning moral scenarios, rendering them cheaper than they should be. That everything turns out ‘ok’ sweeps away
much of the gravity associated with, for example, Melissa’s traumatic past,
Gabriel’s shame, and to some degree, the coming-of-age Snake herself underwent
in the opening chapters. (For an example
of a more subtle way in which to blend morals and story see Cormac McCarthy’s The Road or Gene Wolfe’s The Book of the Long Sun.)
In
the end, Dreamsnake is a book of strong
personal and moral proportion. McIntyre
sets a harsh post-apocalyptic scene in the background and lets her snake
wielding healer-heroine traipse it, righting injustices encountered, and
finding herself in the process. The only
real flaw to the novel is its overt morals and the backing narrative. Ultimately unchallenging, they are later subverted
by the essence of fairy tale clouding certain elements. Whether intentionally or not, Ursula Le
Guin’s Tehanu has several important
elements in common, and comes recommended to readers who enjoyed her book, and
vice versa.
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