Dystopian novel where telepathic humans live under a dome
I read this novel in the mid or late 1990s, I think.
The protagonist is a young person (girl?) who lives in a dome/arc city. Everyone there is telepathic. There is a high degree of conformity expected, everyone is assigned a specialized job, dresses in uniforms, etc. (It really contains basically every dystopian arc trope you can think of...)
At one point she is put into a sort of 'solitary confinement'/sensory deprivation chamber where she is telepathically cut off from the rest of the people. Most citizens consider this a horrible punishment, but she finds it relaxing.
Because she is uniquely able to survive apart from the group(?) she is the first person to leave the city and see what the post-some-kind-of-disaster earth is like.
I remember the name being related to dreamcatchers, but it is definitely not related to The Dreamcatcher by Steven King, or Under The Dome.
story-identification novel
add a comment |
I read this novel in the mid or late 1990s, I think.
The protagonist is a young person (girl?) who lives in a dome/arc city. Everyone there is telepathic. There is a high degree of conformity expected, everyone is assigned a specialized job, dresses in uniforms, etc. (It really contains basically every dystopian arc trope you can think of...)
At one point she is put into a sort of 'solitary confinement'/sensory deprivation chamber where she is telepathically cut off from the rest of the people. Most citizens consider this a horrible punishment, but she finds it relaxing.
Because she is uniquely able to survive apart from the group(?) she is the first person to leave the city and see what the post-some-kind-of-disaster earth is like.
I remember the name being related to dreamcatchers, but it is definitely not related to The Dreamcatcher by Steven King, or Under The Dome.
story-identification novel
Probably not it, but the first thing that pops to mind is Watchstar, Pamela Sargent.
– Radhil
Mar 5 at 19:29
@Radhil They share a good handful of themes, but no.
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:37
add a comment |
I read this novel in the mid or late 1990s, I think.
The protagonist is a young person (girl?) who lives in a dome/arc city. Everyone there is telepathic. There is a high degree of conformity expected, everyone is assigned a specialized job, dresses in uniforms, etc. (It really contains basically every dystopian arc trope you can think of...)
At one point she is put into a sort of 'solitary confinement'/sensory deprivation chamber where she is telepathically cut off from the rest of the people. Most citizens consider this a horrible punishment, but she finds it relaxing.
Because she is uniquely able to survive apart from the group(?) she is the first person to leave the city and see what the post-some-kind-of-disaster earth is like.
I remember the name being related to dreamcatchers, but it is definitely not related to The Dreamcatcher by Steven King, or Under The Dome.
story-identification novel
I read this novel in the mid or late 1990s, I think.
The protagonist is a young person (girl?) who lives in a dome/arc city. Everyone there is telepathic. There is a high degree of conformity expected, everyone is assigned a specialized job, dresses in uniforms, etc. (It really contains basically every dystopian arc trope you can think of...)
At one point she is put into a sort of 'solitary confinement'/sensory deprivation chamber where she is telepathically cut off from the rest of the people. Most citizens consider this a horrible punishment, but she finds it relaxing.
Because she is uniquely able to survive apart from the group(?) she is the first person to leave the city and see what the post-some-kind-of-disaster earth is like.
I remember the name being related to dreamcatchers, but it is definitely not related to The Dreamcatcher by Steven King, or Under The Dome.
story-identification novel
story-identification novel
edited Mar 5 at 19:30
TheLethalCarrot
46.7k17246295
46.7k17246295
asked Mar 5 at 19:14
MegMeg
1485
1485
Probably not it, but the first thing that pops to mind is Watchstar, Pamela Sargent.
– Radhil
Mar 5 at 19:29
@Radhil They share a good handful of themes, but no.
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:37
add a comment |
Probably not it, but the first thing that pops to mind is Watchstar, Pamela Sargent.
– Radhil
Mar 5 at 19:29
@Radhil They share a good handful of themes, but no.
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:37
Probably not it, but the first thing that pops to mind is Watchstar, Pamela Sargent.
– Radhil
Mar 5 at 19:29
Probably not it, but the first thing that pops to mind is Watchstar, Pamela Sargent.
– Radhil
Mar 5 at 19:29
@Radhil They share a good handful of themes, but no.
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:37
@Radhil They share a good handful of themes, but no.
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:37
add a comment |
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
Based off this Goodreads thread, I think you are looking for The Dream Catcher by Monica Hughes. The description from the Goodreads thread is:
I read this mid-90's although I have no idea when it was published. It could be YA. It was the first in a series I think.
The main girl lives in a domed city/utopia and realizes she has telepathic/telekinetic powers. She needs to escape before the authorities discover her but is afraid to leave because she's not even sure if the air is breathable outside the glass dome. Finally she takes her chances. I remember a part where she was amazed by the feel of the wind/sun on her skin.
She meets a guy somewhere along the line too. But for some reason they decide to go back. She's captured and locked in a "dark" room where she actually finds relief from all the telepathic muttering that has been battering against her mind.
I think the leader turns out to be related to her? brother/father/something?
I don't remember how it ends... or perhaps that was the ending...
That sounds more like it than Scatterlings +1
– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 5 at 19:44
Thanks, I guess I just wasn't googling the right combination of words! :)
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:58
1
@Meg The right combination of words was dome and telepaths ;)
– Laurel
Mar 5 at 20:03
Definitely The Dream Catcher, but the Goodreads synopsis is wrong. She doesn't try to escape, but is put in the dark room to see if the thoughts she receives are from outside the dome. She then goes out with the expedition, who are looking for another dome, This is the one featured in a previous book 'Devil on My Back'
– sueelleker
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Scatterlings (1991) by Isobelle Carmody.
Merlin awakes from a terrifying accident not knowing who, or where she is. All she knows for certain, is that this is not her world ... Bewildered and alone, Merlin sets out through an alien landscape to try and discover the truth about herself - as terrifying as it may be!
This excellent answer to a related question on here makes reference to domes and everyone being telepathic. Book quotes taken from the linked answer.
Again his lips did not move and Merlin realised, amazed, that he was reproaching her telepathically.
”You were unhooked from the computer and taken by flier to a smaller dome where you were to be ‘found’ by Andrew and Sacha...you were never meant to see that there was life going outside the dome. You would live among us, and bond with us.”
“Your clanpeople are the descendants many times removed of those people who were refused admission to the domes, and who somehow adapted to the poisons, the increased strength of the sun, and the heat. We are not descendants – we are members of the survivors who lived in the domes.”
I found this with the Google search ‘novel telepathic people under "dome"’ which returned the linked answer.
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "186"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});
function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});
}
});
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f206675%2fdystopian-novel-where-telepathic-humans-live-under-a-dome%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
2 Answers
2
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
Based off this Goodreads thread, I think you are looking for The Dream Catcher by Monica Hughes. The description from the Goodreads thread is:
I read this mid-90's although I have no idea when it was published. It could be YA. It was the first in a series I think.
The main girl lives in a domed city/utopia and realizes she has telepathic/telekinetic powers. She needs to escape before the authorities discover her but is afraid to leave because she's not even sure if the air is breathable outside the glass dome. Finally she takes her chances. I remember a part where she was amazed by the feel of the wind/sun on her skin.
She meets a guy somewhere along the line too. But for some reason they decide to go back. She's captured and locked in a "dark" room where she actually finds relief from all the telepathic muttering that has been battering against her mind.
I think the leader turns out to be related to her? brother/father/something?
I don't remember how it ends... or perhaps that was the ending...
That sounds more like it than Scatterlings +1
– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 5 at 19:44
Thanks, I guess I just wasn't googling the right combination of words! :)
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:58
1
@Meg The right combination of words was dome and telepaths ;)
– Laurel
Mar 5 at 20:03
Definitely The Dream Catcher, but the Goodreads synopsis is wrong. She doesn't try to escape, but is put in the dark room to see if the thoughts she receives are from outside the dome. She then goes out with the expedition, who are looking for another dome, This is the one featured in a previous book 'Devil on My Back'
– sueelleker
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Based off this Goodreads thread, I think you are looking for The Dream Catcher by Monica Hughes. The description from the Goodreads thread is:
I read this mid-90's although I have no idea when it was published. It could be YA. It was the first in a series I think.
The main girl lives in a domed city/utopia and realizes she has telepathic/telekinetic powers. She needs to escape before the authorities discover her but is afraid to leave because she's not even sure if the air is breathable outside the glass dome. Finally she takes her chances. I remember a part where she was amazed by the feel of the wind/sun on her skin.
She meets a guy somewhere along the line too. But for some reason they decide to go back. She's captured and locked in a "dark" room where she actually finds relief from all the telepathic muttering that has been battering against her mind.
I think the leader turns out to be related to her? brother/father/something?
I don't remember how it ends... or perhaps that was the ending...
That sounds more like it than Scatterlings +1
– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 5 at 19:44
Thanks, I guess I just wasn't googling the right combination of words! :)
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:58
1
@Meg The right combination of words was dome and telepaths ;)
– Laurel
Mar 5 at 20:03
Definitely The Dream Catcher, but the Goodreads synopsis is wrong. She doesn't try to escape, but is put in the dark room to see if the thoughts she receives are from outside the dome. She then goes out with the expedition, who are looking for another dome, This is the one featured in a previous book 'Devil on My Back'
– sueelleker
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Based off this Goodreads thread, I think you are looking for The Dream Catcher by Monica Hughes. The description from the Goodreads thread is:
I read this mid-90's although I have no idea when it was published. It could be YA. It was the first in a series I think.
The main girl lives in a domed city/utopia and realizes she has telepathic/telekinetic powers. She needs to escape before the authorities discover her but is afraid to leave because she's not even sure if the air is breathable outside the glass dome. Finally she takes her chances. I remember a part where she was amazed by the feel of the wind/sun on her skin.
She meets a guy somewhere along the line too. But for some reason they decide to go back. She's captured and locked in a "dark" room where she actually finds relief from all the telepathic muttering that has been battering against her mind.
I think the leader turns out to be related to her? brother/father/something?
I don't remember how it ends... or perhaps that was the ending...
Based off this Goodreads thread, I think you are looking for The Dream Catcher by Monica Hughes. The description from the Goodreads thread is:
I read this mid-90's although I have no idea when it was published. It could be YA. It was the first in a series I think.
The main girl lives in a domed city/utopia and realizes she has telepathic/telekinetic powers. She needs to escape before the authorities discover her but is afraid to leave because she's not even sure if the air is breathable outside the glass dome. Finally she takes her chances. I remember a part where she was amazed by the feel of the wind/sun on her skin.
She meets a guy somewhere along the line too. But for some reason they decide to go back. She's captured and locked in a "dark" room where she actually finds relief from all the telepathic muttering that has been battering against her mind.
I think the leader turns out to be related to her? brother/father/something?
I don't remember how it ends... or perhaps that was the ending...
answered Mar 5 at 19:40
LaurelLaurel
6,55912247
6,55912247
That sounds more like it than Scatterlings +1
– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 5 at 19:44
Thanks, I guess I just wasn't googling the right combination of words! :)
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:58
1
@Meg The right combination of words was dome and telepaths ;)
– Laurel
Mar 5 at 20:03
Definitely The Dream Catcher, but the Goodreads synopsis is wrong. She doesn't try to escape, but is put in the dark room to see if the thoughts she receives are from outside the dome. She then goes out with the expedition, who are looking for another dome, This is the one featured in a previous book 'Devil on My Back'
– sueelleker
15 hours ago
add a comment |
That sounds more like it than Scatterlings +1
– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 5 at 19:44
Thanks, I guess I just wasn't googling the right combination of words! :)
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:58
1
@Meg The right combination of words was dome and telepaths ;)
– Laurel
Mar 5 at 20:03
Definitely The Dream Catcher, but the Goodreads synopsis is wrong. She doesn't try to escape, but is put in the dark room to see if the thoughts she receives are from outside the dome. She then goes out with the expedition, who are looking for another dome, This is the one featured in a previous book 'Devil on My Back'
– sueelleker
15 hours ago
That sounds more like it than Scatterlings +1
– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 5 at 19:44
That sounds more like it than Scatterlings +1
– TheLethalCarrot
Mar 5 at 19:44
Thanks, I guess I just wasn't googling the right combination of words! :)
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:58
Thanks, I guess I just wasn't googling the right combination of words! :)
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:58
1
1
@Meg The right combination of words was dome and telepaths ;)
– Laurel
Mar 5 at 20:03
@Meg The right combination of words was dome and telepaths ;)
– Laurel
Mar 5 at 20:03
Definitely The Dream Catcher, but the Goodreads synopsis is wrong. She doesn't try to escape, but is put in the dark room to see if the thoughts she receives are from outside the dome. She then goes out with the expedition, who are looking for another dome, This is the one featured in a previous book 'Devil on My Back'
– sueelleker
15 hours ago
Definitely The Dream Catcher, but the Goodreads synopsis is wrong. She doesn't try to escape, but is put in the dark room to see if the thoughts she receives are from outside the dome. She then goes out with the expedition, who are looking for another dome, This is the one featured in a previous book 'Devil on My Back'
– sueelleker
15 hours ago
add a comment |
Scatterlings (1991) by Isobelle Carmody.
Merlin awakes from a terrifying accident not knowing who, or where she is. All she knows for certain, is that this is not her world ... Bewildered and alone, Merlin sets out through an alien landscape to try and discover the truth about herself - as terrifying as it may be!
This excellent answer to a related question on here makes reference to domes and everyone being telepathic. Book quotes taken from the linked answer.
Again his lips did not move and Merlin realised, amazed, that he was reproaching her telepathically.
”You were unhooked from the computer and taken by flier to a smaller dome where you were to be ‘found’ by Andrew and Sacha...you were never meant to see that there was life going outside the dome. You would live among us, and bond with us.”
“Your clanpeople are the descendants many times removed of those people who were refused admission to the domes, and who somehow adapted to the poisons, the increased strength of the sun, and the heat. We are not descendants – we are members of the survivors who lived in the domes.”
I found this with the Google search ‘novel telepathic people under "dome"’ which returned the linked answer.
add a comment |
Scatterlings (1991) by Isobelle Carmody.
Merlin awakes from a terrifying accident not knowing who, or where she is. All she knows for certain, is that this is not her world ... Bewildered and alone, Merlin sets out through an alien landscape to try and discover the truth about herself - as terrifying as it may be!
This excellent answer to a related question on here makes reference to domes and everyone being telepathic. Book quotes taken from the linked answer.
Again his lips did not move and Merlin realised, amazed, that he was reproaching her telepathically.
”You were unhooked from the computer and taken by flier to a smaller dome where you were to be ‘found’ by Andrew and Sacha...you were never meant to see that there was life going outside the dome. You would live among us, and bond with us.”
“Your clanpeople are the descendants many times removed of those people who were refused admission to the domes, and who somehow adapted to the poisons, the increased strength of the sun, and the heat. We are not descendants – we are members of the survivors who lived in the domes.”
I found this with the Google search ‘novel telepathic people under "dome"’ which returned the linked answer.
add a comment |
Scatterlings (1991) by Isobelle Carmody.
Merlin awakes from a terrifying accident not knowing who, or where she is. All she knows for certain, is that this is not her world ... Bewildered and alone, Merlin sets out through an alien landscape to try and discover the truth about herself - as terrifying as it may be!
This excellent answer to a related question on here makes reference to domes and everyone being telepathic. Book quotes taken from the linked answer.
Again his lips did not move and Merlin realised, amazed, that he was reproaching her telepathically.
”You were unhooked from the computer and taken by flier to a smaller dome where you were to be ‘found’ by Andrew and Sacha...you were never meant to see that there was life going outside the dome. You would live among us, and bond with us.”
“Your clanpeople are the descendants many times removed of those people who were refused admission to the domes, and who somehow adapted to the poisons, the increased strength of the sun, and the heat. We are not descendants – we are members of the survivors who lived in the domes.”
I found this with the Google search ‘novel telepathic people under "dome"’ which returned the linked answer.
Scatterlings (1991) by Isobelle Carmody.
Merlin awakes from a terrifying accident not knowing who, or where she is. All she knows for certain, is that this is not her world ... Bewildered and alone, Merlin sets out through an alien landscape to try and discover the truth about herself - as terrifying as it may be!
This excellent answer to a related question on here makes reference to domes and everyone being telepathic. Book quotes taken from the linked answer.
Again his lips did not move and Merlin realised, amazed, that he was reproaching her telepathically.
”You were unhooked from the computer and taken by flier to a smaller dome where you were to be ‘found’ by Andrew and Sacha...you were never meant to see that there was life going outside the dome. You would live among us, and bond with us.”
“Your clanpeople are the descendants many times removed of those people who were refused admission to the domes, and who somehow adapted to the poisons, the increased strength of the sun, and the heat. We are not descendants – we are members of the survivors who lived in the domes.”
I found this with the Google search ‘novel telepathic people under "dome"’ which returned the linked answer.
answered Mar 5 at 19:38
TheLethalCarrotTheLethalCarrot
46.7k17246295
46.7k17246295
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to Science Fiction & Fantasy Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fscifi.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f206675%2fdystopian-novel-where-telepathic-humans-live-under-a-dome%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function () {
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
});
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Probably not it, but the first thing that pops to mind is Watchstar, Pamela Sargent.
– Radhil
Mar 5 at 19:29
@Radhil They share a good handful of themes, but no.
– Meg
Mar 5 at 19:37