Book Descriptions
for Dreamhunter by Elizabeth Knox
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
From The United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY)
As fifteen-year-old Laura becomes a dreamhunter, one of a special few individuals who can enter the Place to catch dreams and broadcast them to others, her father’s disappearance leads her also into a world of intrigue and political corruption. The idea of selling dreams is thought provoking, as is the moral dilemma of the possibility of using a special gift for good or for evil. Knox builds a fascinating fantasy world with all-too-believable and disturbing aspects. ca
From the Publisher
Laura comes from a world similar to our own except for one difference: it is next to the Place, an unfathomable land that fosters dreams of every kind and is inaccessible to all but a select few, the Dreamhunters. These are individuals with special gifts: the ability to catch larger-than-life dreams and relay them to audiences in the magnificent dream palace, the Rainbow Opera. People travel from all around to experience the benefits of the hunters' unique visions.
Now fifteen-year-old Laura and her cousin Rose, daughters of Dreamhunters, are eligible to test themselves at the Place and find out whether they qualify for the passage. But nothing can prepare them for what they are about to discover. For within the Place lies a horrific secret kept hidden by corrupt members of the government. And when Laura's father, the man who discovered the Place, disappears, she realizes that this secret has the power to destroy everyone she loves . . .
In the midst of a fascinating landscape, Laura's dreamy childhood is ending and a nightmare beginning. This rich novel, filled with beauty, danger, politics, and intrigue, comes to a powerful crescendo, leaving readers clamoring for Book Two.
Dreamhunter is a 2007 Bank Street - Best Children's Book of the Year.
"It is like nothing else I've ever read." -- Stephenie Meyer, The Twilight Saga