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Dawn

Front Cover
307 Reviews
Warner Books, 1987 - Fiction - 264 pages
The human race, now infertile, fights to maintain its identity when the alien species, Oankali, offers to trade genetic material and bioengineering at the price of metamorphosing a new kind of being

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User ratings

5 stars
86
4 stars
124
3 stars
67
2 stars
17
1 star
7

Absolutely riveting premise. - Goodreads
Weak character development, simplistic writing. - Goodreads
It was good, but the ending sucked. - Goodreads
octavia butler's prose is masterful. - Goodreads
This was my introduction to Octavia - a BRILLIANT book. - Goodreads
It has a great imperfect female character. - Goodreads

Review: Dawn (Xenogenesis #1)

User Review  - Sergio - Goodreads

'Dawn' is the first book in Butler's Xenogenesis trilogy, and as such it is difficult to asses without having read the subsequent volumes. Nevertheless, as a standalone I found it an insightful and ... Read full review

Review: Dawn (Xenogenesis #1)

User Review  - Carolyn W - Goodreads

When aliens rescue the survivors of a war-destroyed Earth, the last few members of the human race must ask themselves how far they can trust their extraterrestrial benefactors, whether survival as a ... Read full review

All 307 reviews »

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About the author (1987)

Science-fiction writer and novelist Octavia Estelle Butler was born in Pasadena, California, on June 22, 1947. She earned as Associate of Arts degree from Pasadena City College in 1968 and later attended California State University and the University of California. Her first novel, Patternmaster, was the first in a series about a society run by a group of telepaths who are mentally linked to one another. She explored the topics of race, poverty, politics, religion, and human nature in her works. She won a Hugo Award in 1984 for her short story Speech Sounds and a Hugo Award and Nebula Award in 1985 for her novella Bloodchild. She received a MacArthur Grant from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The award pays $295,000 over a five-year period to creative people who push the boundaries of their fields. She died in Lake Forest Park, Washington on February 24, 2006 at the age of 58.

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