Community Reviews

Rating(3.9 / 5.0, 100 votes)
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100 reviews
March 26,2025
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This is a difficult book to review. I had heard that Dune is great and its sequels get progressively worse, although people normally mean the sequels written by Brian Herbert after his father passed away.

I loved Dune - it's a great political thriller with a very epic scope, as well as being a prime example of ecofiction since the main driving force behind everyone's political maneuvers is keeping the right ecosystem intact to control the melange or spice. It's fun and deep and, while not exactly fast-paced, it's riveting and very easy to get through. I kept rooting for Duke Leto even though we knew from the start that he wasn't going to be around long. We're very rarely privy to the characters' inner voices, but characterisation is good enough that we get a strong sense of who's who and why they're doing what they're doing even though the exact steps of the plan might be a bit opaque to us. It also works as sci-fi in that it introduces a lot of concepts and slang without it ever feeling obtuse. I had some problems with it, mainly with how Herbert linked homosexuality and evil in the figure of Baron Harkonnen, but it was a couple of paragraphs that didn't really have an effect beyond painting the Harkonnen as depraved villains. A terrible choice but I figured it was 1965 and people were more openly bigoted, so yeah, wrong, but I could set it aside and not let it taint my views of Dune.

Then came Dune Messiah, much shorter than Dune and with a far narrower scope, but still pretty interesting. Herbert deconstructs the idea of heroes and chosen ones and it's great to see. Normally, stories finish just after the hero raises to power, but what happens when a so-called hero has to wage wars across planets and commit literal genocides to keep his throne? And what happens when everything gets bogged down in bureaucracy? The pacing was a bit off, as everything happens mainly in overlong secret council meetings and inside Paul's head. And everyone likes to wax political and philosophical. So it was a bit more tedious than Dune, but still a pretty strong sci-fi novel with some mysteries at its core and a fitting ending. I really enjoyed reading it.

But then I got to Children of Dune. It starts great. It reminded me of everything I had loved about Dune: the plots, the political intrigues, the ecological problems at its core. I could have read a novel about the life cycle of the worms and how interdependent it is with the surrounding desert. And on top of that it had House Corrino planning an assassination of the Royal Twins, Ghanima and Leto II. I suspected some things were wrong after Alia was done a disservice by being turned into Baron Harkonnen. No one really dies forever in Dune, it would seem, but when the antagonist is as cardboard villainy as Baron Harkonnen, do we really need to destroy a fascinating character such as Alia just to bring him back? It didn’t add anything new to the story; it was a literal replay of the events in Dune. And this time around I paid more attention to the philosophical garbage everyone was spouting – turns out Frank Herbert really liked Freudian and Jungian philosophy so I was quickly done with his supposedly deep tirades. His homophobia and sexism were also pretty overt by his third volume, to the point I dreaded reading the book. Not surprising for a Freud fan, but still. But what I really, really couldn’t stomach were those ramblings of someone who’s gone too far with magic mushrooms. If you enjoy shrooms, you do you, but please know that you haven’t made any breakthroughs about the Truths of the Universe just because you’re high. Herbert’s editor should have protected the Dune legacy by not letting him publish this drivel, but of course Herbert ended up banging his agent at Putnam, so probably the priorities weren’t in the right order.

My advice: stop at Dune or if you must, just after Dune Messiah. Remember, I made the mistake of continuing the series so you don’t have to.
March 26,2025
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I was on the fence about going into to this. It started a little slow the writting was difficult to get by but then suddenly i couldn't stop reading. I was submerged in the story and invested in the characters. I only read the first three books of the series and honestly don't know if i will ever read the rest but even if i don't i still feel i the real masterpiece is these three of the series.
March 26,2025
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Як я могла пропустити цей шедевр наукової фантастики! Відчула себе у свиті герцога Літо і відправилась на нову планету.... Арракіс притягує та відштовхує одночасно. Поринула з головою у політику, інтриги, тайни...Мандрую Дюною, зачарована пустелею та двома Місяцями,які мені уже сняться
March 26,2025
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Это было - в е л и к о л е п н о .

Мне сложно подобрать правильные слова, чтобы описать мои чувства после прочтения.

Говорят, Френк Герберт вдохновился созданием Дюны благодаря опыту работы в Исследовательском центре в Калифорнии, который специализировался на исследовании опустынивании.

Мне не с чем сравнивать Дюну. Я впервые познакомилась с этим жанром и опыт был - блистательный.

Фрэнк Герберт вдавался в скрупулезные подробности жизни на Арракисе. Герберт уделяет равное внимание характеристике, сюжету и повествованию. Книга полна незабываемых персонажей от задиристой Леди Джессики, до Пола Атрейдеса, который начинается как довольно общий Люк Скайуокерский ” избранный " ребенок до мессианской фигуры, всегда готовой с мудрым комментарием для каждого случая. Злодеи еще более красочны, особенно сверхразмерный барон Владимир Харконнен, настолько толстый, что ему нужны антигравитационные устройства, чтобы помочь поддержать его обхват. И его психованный племянник Фейд-Раута, который является безжалостным прирожденным убийцей и по какой-то причине, показался мне геем.

Я боялась читать эту книгу, потому что она - большая. Я боялась, что начав ее я заскучаю от огромного количества воды в ней. И как же я была приятна удивлена, что ошибаюсь!

Я захлебывалась от событий, добавляя все новые закладки. Я переживала вместе с героями и когда книга закончилась, что я - опустошена. Опустошена как сосуд для воды.

Если вы еще так же как и я , не знакомы с данным жанром - обязательно читайте Дюну. Френк удивит вам многим.
March 26,2025
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"He who controls the spice controls the universe."

Een van de meest vermaarde scifi reeksen - en terecht! De invloed van Dune op alles wat erop volgde kan niet overschat worden. Verschillende filosofische, religieuze, en sociologische thema's worden besproken in een messianistisch kaderverhaal met een grondig en min of meer realistisch uitgebouwde, maar toch atypische wereld; het typische motief van een doorgedreven computermaatschappij is vervangen door een feodaal systeem met een achterdocht voor 'denkende' technologie en een focus op mysticisme en individuen gespecialiseerd voor een bepaalde functie.
Sommige hoofdstukken voelen eerder langdradig aan, en de flow versnelt drastisch naar het einde van het eerste van het derde boek toe.

" I must not fear. Fear is the mind-killer.
Fear is the little-death that brings total obliteration.
I will face my fear. I will permit it to pass over me and through me.
And when it has gone past, I will turn the inner eye to see its path.
Where the fear has gone there will be nothing. Only I will remain."
March 26,2025
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All in all, a high quality edition.
Books 2 and 3 are way better than Book 1, in the sense that you get to delve deeper into Frank Herbert's philosophical pondering which shapes the world of Dune and all the major characters.
A great book for a collection.
March 26,2025
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‘In the week before their departure to Arrakis, when all the final scurrying about had reached a nearly unbearable frenzy, an old crone came to visit the mother of the boy, Paul.’

When I first read this sentence, over fifty years ago, I could not envisage that I would be drawn into a world which could hold my attention for so long. I’ve just reread the trilogy and it still holds much of its initial appeal.

The trilogy is set in the distant future on the desert planet of Arrakis. Arrakis is the source of spice (melange), the most valuable substance in the galaxy. Why? Spice is a mind enhancing drug which enables interstellar travel. Control of the trade is critical. The first novel opens as Duke Leto Atreides, his concubine the Lady Jessica and son Paul are about to travel to Arrakis (Dune). Not long after they arrive, the Duke is poisoned but Lady Jessica and Paul manage to escape into the desert. What follows (in the trilogy) is a multi-generational story of prophecy, adaptation, and survival.
One of the most important features of the trilogy is the interrelationship between the people and the environment. Dune was not always a desert, and some would like to see the desertification reversed. Is it possible? And at what cost? Moving from ecology to people: lineage is critical. Paul Atreides and his descendants are key.

The first book in the trilogy provides the world, the foundation for the remaining two books. While there is an inevitability in what follows, those books are important. Mysticism, a Messiah, and (naturally) self-interest all have a part to play.

I finished the trilogy and will start the second Dune trilogy soon.

‘You wonder how one could presume to educate such a person as yourself? You, with the knowledge of a multitude held there in your memories? That’s just it, you see! You think yourself educated, but all you are is a repository of dead lives. You don’t yet have a life of your own. You’re just a walking surfeit of others, all with one goal—to seek death.’

Jennifer Cameron-Smith
March 26,2025
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I know I am supposed to like this, but I didn't. I slogged through half of the first book and finally realized why I wasn't enjoying this at all. This is Game of Thrones in space. I just can't get curious about palace intrigue and hereditary nobility.

Like all good scifi (in my opinion) the scifi is background to the human plot. Unfortunately, this book doesn't have a human plot that interests me.
March 26,2025
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Dune: 5
Dune Messiah: 3
Children of Dune: 3.5
Average of the three in one: 3.8 (4)

Anyway, I think Dune really is the shining jewel here with an appealing political plot, planetary awareness with an awesome dedication to all ecologists, various cultural influences, and relatable characters despite it playing eons in the future.

The second and third book break a bit with this, removing the human out of the story a bit. It all becomes more abstract and pseudo-philosophical at times. Nevertheless there is a nice overarching story about certainty, ambition, flawed leadership, and the dangers of totalitarian powers. The great variety of cultural influences is still neatly shown.

Overall, I especially recommend the first book. If the writing style and universe appeals to you, then the second and third ones are a neat addition.
March 26,2025
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The mythos the late Mr Herbert Has bequeathed to us either soaring eloquence of vision or just leaves the reader bored. I am of the former. This is mature, intellectual, dramatic science fiction,that still resonates as a warning about power and its dangers. I seem to read this every few years, and never tire, nor fail to gain a new insight. Simply put, glorious.
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