Kemper's Reviews > Dune
Dune
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Kemper's review
bookshelves: sci-fi, space, favorites, 2017-reread
Jul 02, 2008
bookshelves: sci-fi, space, favorites, 2017-reread
Read 2 times. Last read April 3, 2017 to April 23, 2017.
I have to write this review without rhythm so that it won鈥檛 attract a worm.
In the distant future Arrakis is a hellhole desert planet where anyone who doesn鈥檛 die of thirst will probably be eaten by one of the giant sandworms. It鈥檚 also the only place where the precious spice melange can be found so it鈥檚 incredibly valuable, and the honorable Duke Leto Atreides has been ordered by the Padishah Emperor to take over control of Arrakis from his mortal enemies, the House Harkonnen. While this seems like a great offer on the surface the Duke and his people realize that it鈥檚 actually a cunning trap being set by the Emperor and Baron Harkonnen.
The only hope seems to be allying with the local populace called Fremen whose harsh environment has led them to become an incredibly tough and disciplined people, but they have their own vision of what Arrakis should be. They also have a prophecy about the coming of a messiah figure who will lead them to freedom, and the Duke鈥檚 son Paul looks like he may be exactly who they鈥檝e been waiting for.
This is classic sci-fi that really deserves the label. What Frank Herbert accomplished in one novel is stunning because he built a fascinatingly detailed universe in which the politics, religion, economics, espionage, and military strategy are all equally important. He then blended these more grounded concepts with bigger sci-fi ideas like being able to use spice to see through space-time, and the scope of that encompasses trying to pick the proper path through various potential timelines as well as free will vs. fate.
I think one of the factors that helps this story stay timeless is that so much of it is based on what humanity becomes vs. trying to predict what futuristic technology would be like. This is a society that once had a war with machines and has since rejected any type of computers so people have developed to fill the gap with the help of the spice. The Mentats are trained to use data to predict outcomes. The Navigators of the Guild have used so much of the spice to help them move through space that they鈥檙e mutating. The all female Bene Gesserit have developed a variety of skills to place their members alongside positions of power to help advance their breeding scheme that spans generations. Herbert also cleverly came up with an excuse that explains why knives and hand-to-hand combat are so important with the idea of the personal body shields.
So even though we still got a good sci-fi鈥檚 novel worth of cool gadgets the emphasis is on what the people can do and how that鈥檚 developed over a long period of time. It also adds a lot of depth to the political dimensions because all of these groups have different agendas that cause them all to mistrust each other, but because they all fill these various roles none can exist without the others.
There are also parallels to our world that are still in play because the idea of a desert people caught up in the power struggles of various outsiders because of their valuable natural resource is an obvious allegory to the Middle East that still works today. Plus, the classic film Lawrence of Arabia came out a few years before Herbert published this, and you have to think that it had some influence on him because there are elements of the story that seem very much inspired by it.
While the whole concept of a Chosen One has gotten a bit worn over time that鈥檚 not Herbert鈥檚 fault, and this is still a fantastic sci-fi story with big ideas that also works as space opera as well as being an epic adventure story.
In the distant future Arrakis is a hellhole desert planet where anyone who doesn鈥檛 die of thirst will probably be eaten by one of the giant sandworms. It鈥檚 also the only place where the precious spice melange can be found so it鈥檚 incredibly valuable, and the honorable Duke Leto Atreides has been ordered by the Padishah Emperor to take over control of Arrakis from his mortal enemies, the House Harkonnen. While this seems like a great offer on the surface the Duke and his people realize that it鈥檚 actually a cunning trap being set by the Emperor and Baron Harkonnen.
The only hope seems to be allying with the local populace called Fremen whose harsh environment has led them to become an incredibly tough and disciplined people, but they have their own vision of what Arrakis should be. They also have a prophecy about the coming of a messiah figure who will lead them to freedom, and the Duke鈥檚 son Paul looks like he may be exactly who they鈥檝e been waiting for.
This is classic sci-fi that really deserves the label. What Frank Herbert accomplished in one novel is stunning because he built a fascinatingly detailed universe in which the politics, religion, economics, espionage, and military strategy are all equally important. He then blended these more grounded concepts with bigger sci-fi ideas like being able to use spice to see through space-time, and the scope of that encompasses trying to pick the proper path through various potential timelines as well as free will vs. fate.
I think one of the factors that helps this story stay timeless is that so much of it is based on what humanity becomes vs. trying to predict what futuristic technology would be like. This is a society that once had a war with machines and has since rejected any type of computers so people have developed to fill the gap with the help of the spice. The Mentats are trained to use data to predict outcomes. The Navigators of the Guild have used so much of the spice to help them move through space that they鈥檙e mutating. The all female Bene Gesserit have developed a variety of skills to place their members alongside positions of power to help advance their breeding scheme that spans generations. Herbert also cleverly came up with an excuse that explains why knives and hand-to-hand combat are so important with the idea of the personal body shields.
So even though we still got a good sci-fi鈥檚 novel worth of cool gadgets the emphasis is on what the people can do and how that鈥檚 developed over a long period of time. It also adds a lot of depth to the political dimensions because all of these groups have different agendas that cause them all to mistrust each other, but because they all fill these various roles none can exist without the others.
There are also parallels to our world that are still in play because the idea of a desert people caught up in the power struggles of various outsiders because of their valuable natural resource is an obvious allegory to the Middle East that still works today. Plus, the classic film Lawrence of Arabia came out a few years before Herbert published this, and you have to think that it had some influence on him because there are elements of the story that seem very much inspired by it.
While the whole concept of a Chosen One has gotten a bit worn over time that鈥檚 not Herbert鈥檚 fault, and this is still a fantastic sci-fi story with big ideas that also works as space opera as well as being an epic adventure story.
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Reading Progress
Finished Reading
July 2, 2008
– Shelved
April 3, 2017
–
Started Reading
April 23, 2017
–
Finished Reading
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Steelydanrules
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rated it 5 stars
Jan 29, 2017 12:22AM

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I don't know if I want to ride a sandworm, but I would like a stillsuit.



I'd send you a copy, but now I'm scared that I might vanish afterwards.

A very good review above, Kemper, and as a response I will do my damndest to have read it by the end of the year.
(Feel free to call me out on the 1st of January if I haven't).

I tried hard with the sequels and some of the prequels, but for me nothing ever came close to this one. It's the Lonesome Dove syndrome. Fantastic first book but I was always disappointed in everything else associated with it.

A very good review above, Kemper, and as a response I will do my damndest to hav..."
Thanks! I'll try to remember to remind you at the end of the year.

I tried hard with the sequels and some of the prequels, but for me nothing ever came close to this one. It's the Lonesome..."
I read the books up till Heretics of Dune, then I got distracted or something. This was years ago in high school during my heavy-duty sci-fi/horror/fantasy years. The only book I honestly remember is Dune. It was so bizarre and the world-building is so complete that it made a huge impression on my 16 yr old brain. My goal within the next few years: reread the Dune series AND Asimov's Foundation series. Whew.