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Octavia E. Butler, Aldrich Barrett: Dawn (AudiobookFormat, 2014, Brilliance Audio)

mp3 cd

Published Nov. 18, 2014 by Brilliance Audio.

ISBN:
978-1-4915-8184-1
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4 stars (2 reviews)

aliens reproducing with humans. they are mixing genes with humans because humans have destroyed earth basically because nuclear war. because they are stupid. credit to katsoda26

7 editions

reviewed Dawn by Octavia E. Butler (Lilith's Brood, #1)

Sexy incestuous alien tentacle time for health and happiness

5 stars

Another essential Butler novel. It's the first post-post apocalypse novel I can think of, because earth is wiped out in a nuclear conflagration, but the story starts after the final human survivors have been whisked away on a huge alien spaceship by a race which compulsively genetically merges itself with species it encounters. With humans the compulsion is particularly strong, it's sexually charged. They are at times lustful, loving, protective and dictatorial.

The echoes of slavery and colonisation are hard to escape here, as with all Butler's fiction. If you've read The Patternist series and Kindred, you will find familiar ideas from those books here.

Dawn showcases one of the greats of the genre at her finest, and I am relishing the prospect of the two sequels.

reviewed Dawn by Octavia E. Butler (Lilith's Brood, #1)

dawn

4 stars

The Oankali have strange and disturbing ideas about consent, which makes this an uncomfortable book to read. (This is, like, intentional, though.)

There's a disregard for singular 'they' as a genderless pronoun, instead 'it' is used to refer to the Ooloi; this doesn't feel as bad as it might because it's apparently the pronoun that the Ooloi chose to use for themselves in English

The biggest problem I have with it technically is that not all that much happens for much of the book? At least the first half is spent with Lilith just learning things about the Oankali. Which is interesting, but pretty slow