On This Page
Description
Iris Angharads, a determined, independent woman, sets herself one massive goal: to make the poison-filled atmosphere of Venus hospitable to humans. She works day and night to realize her dream, with only one person sharing her passion, Liang Chen. It seems impossible to make Venus, with its intolerable air and waterless environment, into a paradise, but Iris succeeds. And in doing so, she also creates a powerful dynasty, beginning with her first born, Benzi Liangharad.Tags
Recommendations
Member Reviews
This book surprised me - I did not expect it to be that good. Although this is a SciFi novel, the story itself is simply just an excellent story about how people behave, think, feel, interact in response to ambition, love, and aspirations that are bigger than themselves. It just goes to show that good writing is simply good writing regardless of the genre. I really appreciated the development of many of the characters in the novel. Almost none of them remain unchanged in response to the huge undertaking of the early stages of terraforming a planet - Venus. Although the emphasis of the story is on character development, Sargent does not go lightly on the thinking and planning that would be required to terraform a planet. Indeed, these show more physical real challenges are what drives much of the character development in the story. This is what good Sci Fi does - places people in a future situation and then explores how people would respond. This is an excellent book. I look forward to reading the two sequels: Venus of Shadows and Child of Venus. show less
The matriarchal Life on the plains of Nebraska weren't what Iris Angharad dreamed of. She dreamed of joining the hand-picked teams that were working to terraform Venus. When she finished her farm chores, she linked to lessons on her screen: biology, chemistry, hydroponics. Her hard work paid off and the government of Earth paid for her lessons. The boy she met, sent to her village to make repairs in the town hall, shared her dream. They became bondmates and parents at the age of 16. (!) Now, Iris leaves her child with her mother and studies in the (Venus) Islands Institute in Caracas, where she will be prepared, if she can cut it, to live in the upper atmosphere of Venus, and work with others to make the domes on Venus' surface that show more will sustain Humans until the planet's surface can support humans.
This book is really about human politics, and how they stand in the way of accomplishing the tasks that an assembled team is working on. The characters, as other reviewers commented, are not likeable. So it makes the reader wonder: what did Ms Sargent set out to do here? Still and all, I enjoyed it for its world-building theme, as that's what I dreamt of when I was young: that we (Americans) would be going to Mars. Ha! show less
This book is really about human politics, and how they stand in the way of accomplishing the tasks that an assembled team is working on. The characters, as other reviewers commented, are not likeable. So it makes the reader wonder: what did Ms Sargent set out to do here? Still and all, I enjoyed it for its world-building theme, as that's what I dreamt of when I was young: that we (Americans) would be going to Mars. Ha! show less
A big long family-saga type book. The narrator's mother has ambitions to become mayor of her agrarian village and to leave a successful farm to her daughter. However, her daughter insists on spending all of her free time studying online, with dreams of becoming part of the ambitious project to settle Venus. She is rebellious and bitter about her mother's failure to understand her dreams - but when she succeeds, after great effort, she in turn doesn't understand her son, who feels that the Venus Project is all a big PR scam set up by the Earth government, who doesn't understand that cooperating with the more technologically advanced people who live in artificial space habitats would be the more sensible way to go.
Well done, interesting show more book, but it didn't grab me enough to make me go seek out the sequels. show less
Well done, interesting show more book, but it didn't grab me enough to make me go seek out the sequels. show less
I wish that it had been more about terraforming Venus and less about the people. I admit that I dispised the main character Iris by a 100 pages, by the half way point I hated her, and when I peeked ahead and found she died I was truly happy. This book is screwing up my reading schedule.
Ms. Sargent has written a rather detailed description of Earth with changing social values and technological conditions in the far future. It is a sci-fi book whose target market is women rather than men in my opinion. She describes the life of Iris a young woman that longs to leave the boring life of a Plains woman who is bound to the land, farming and the passage of this farm land for generation to generation through the maternal side of a family. Men play little role in this culture, when they are adults they are encouraged to leave to work as migrant labour, coming home every-so-often to visit family but there is little to the traditional family. The book deals with issues of Iris wanting more out her life and her struggles to take show more part in a childhood dream of working on a terra-forming project on Venus.
Pamela Sargent does a good job in describing this world and the social issues surrounding it...but for me it very dry and moved at a slow pace....there was little in the form of drama that did not involve a woman's issue, men floated in and out of her life and seemed quite superfluous. I frankly could not finish the book having stopped after 2/3 of the way through. It just was not a compelling page turner for me. show less
Pamela Sargent does a good job in describing this world and the social issues surrounding it...but for me it very dry and moved at a slow pace....there was little in the form of drama that did not involve a woman's issue, men floated in and out of her life and seemed quite superfluous. I frankly could not finish the book having stopped after 2/3 of the way through. It just was not a compelling page turner for me. show less
https://www.goodreads.com/topic/show/21329866-venus-of-dreams---april-2020?comme...
Very disappointed. Read Tara's comment in the above buddy read for why this book was wrong for her, and for me.
That said, I have no idea if it isn't the perfect start of a wonderful trilogy for someone else.
I have enjoyed some shorter works by Sargent.
Very disappointed. Read Tara's comment in the above buddy read for why this book was wrong for her, and for me.
That said, I have no idea if it isn't the perfect start of a wonderful trilogy for someone else.
I have enjoyed some shorter works by Sargent.
...Sargent was the first to conceive of the terraforming of Venus as the central issue of a group of novels. ...She matches the scale of the technological problem with social change; the ability to terraform Venus, if possible, lies many years in the future and society inevitably will change. ...Her narrative is also epic. Venus of Dreams and its sequels carries a variety of protagonists through several generations. Most prominent among them are the women who dream as greatly and perform as valiantly as any Burroughs hero. -- Masterpieces of Science Fiction
Members
- Recently Added By
Lists
Favorite Science Fiction by Women Authors
737 works; 202 members
Space Colonization
100 works; 26 members
Talk Discussions
Past Discussions
Venusian geography ahoy in Good Show Sir! — bad science fiction and fantasy covers (October 2024)
Author Information
Some Editions
Series
Work Relationships
Common Knowledge
Classifications
Statistics
- Members
- 313
- Popularity
- 101,391
- Reviews
- 8
- Rating
- (3.20)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
- ISBNs
- 6
- ASINs
- 10































































