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The Apolyton Science Fiction Discussion Group: The Dune Chronicles

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  • The Apolyton Science Fiction Discussion Group: The Dune Chronicles

    (Well, I, for one, will be glad to get the Man in the High Castle off my sig. Worst. Discussion. Ever.)

    We’re going to open the discussion up to all 6 books, no spoilers, so please: DEAL WITH IT. Otherwise, there is likely no way in Hell that I’ll ever scratch up a voluntary discussion on the merits of Children of Dune for the rest of my life.

    *JohnT dies*



    I’m sure everybody has read the first book, probably the second book (possibly the most boring and depressing sequel in science fiction up to that time), and you probably gave up Dune sometime during books 3-5, picked it up again a few years later determined to plow through it (including Chapterhouse, and having done so then promptly forgot all that weird crap about the Honored Matres and the Scattering, remembering only the bizarre sex scene between Duncan and that HM who then became the BG’s reverend mother in the final novel, after the death of Darwi Odrade. Or maybe not - but that's how I read the books, and I'm willing to wager that a couple of you did it the same way.

    Ok, the 6 books in the Dune Chronicles are as follows:

    Dune
    Dune Messiah
    Originally part of the first book, split off into its own separate novel to make the first book more upbeat and clearcut.
    Children of Dune
    God: Emperor of Dune
    Heretics of Dune
    Chapterhouse: Dune


    Those abortions co-written by Herbert’s son and Brian Anderson are not up for discussion here – unless the discussion is a one-sided denunciation of their hacking and pillaging of the Dune tradition and their complete lack of awareness regarding the source material.

    *A-hem!*

    Dune is a lot of things to a lot of people, and for a lot of us who read it first from the ages of 10-16, it was our first introduction into the political minds of adults, people whose every move is calculated, every thought measured, their reactions appraised, tested, and re-appraised. People just do not do stuff in Dune with disregard of how other people will react, sometimes I wonder with all the infighting and back-biting how anything of consequence ever gets decided.

    Nuances in the curve of a lip, the stance of a potential enemy are pervasive in Dune – more than any other author I’ve read in science fiction, Herbert pays very careful attention to body language and the messages conveyed by such. Re-read the passage where Jessica sends for Chani to revive Paul after Maud’Dib drank the Water of Life: the tension raised not by the words or the situation but by the rigid adherence to formality by Chani, and the physical and vocal tensions this adherence creates within her (conveyed via Jessica's internal reactions to Chani's body language).

    Another thing I like about Dune is that Frank Herbert really lets his personality and intellect shine in these novels – he uses the Dune books to tell us his thoughts on Messiah-hood, prescience, environmentalism, religion, politics, etc. Usually an author won’t be so open in their novels, ensuring that plotting and pace take precedence over discourse and background. Herbert is the opposite – he has no problems stopping the action for a discourse/monologue on tradition as he does in Children, in the two chapters where Leto and Stilgar go for their walk. When I read Dune I’m actually aware that not only is Herbert telling us a story, he is also telling us quite a bit about himself and what he thinks is important and interesting.

    If I don’t look too closely I buy the technology – it must’ve been quite a challenge to come up with a believeable interstellar feudal society dominated by swordsmen and hand-to-hand combat w/o projectile weapons but with a restrictive and expensive means of space travel. Herbert came up with a pretty decent back-story to explain the lack of computers and the general technological retardation that we wouldn’t expect in such a vast society, a back-story that was made much clearer with the publication of the awesome Dune Encyclopedia. However, I do think that after a few thousand years IX would’ve come up with a mechanical means of interstellar travel and that the Tleilaxu would’ve been able to come up with a spice substitute – the chemical make up can’t be THAT hard to break down.

    I’ve got a lot more to say about these novels, but this is enough for now.

    Favorite character: Stilgar, of course, followed by Leto II.
    Least favorite character: Yueh, Siona in God: Emperor.
    Favorite book: Children of Dune, followed by Dune
    Least favorite book: Dune Messiah by a WIDE margin after Heretics of Dune.
    Last edited by JohnT; October 7, 2003, 10:29.

  • #2
    amen, someone else who agrees with me that the house x books are an abomination.

    i've read all of them except for the house corinno, and i have to say, anything after "god emperor" kinda stinks.

    the bastard books screw butcher the timeline, tech scale, and everything else.

    the two at the end are flat out bizarre--especially with the super ultra mega powerful duncan idaho...

    god emperor's boring, really, but it's the last of the decent ones.

    my favorites are the first three.
    B♭3

    Comment


    • #3
      one thing that i find strange and interesting is the treatment of the harkonnens.

      they are, of course, the evil antagonists.

      the baron, also, is strongly suggested to be homosexual.

      i'll have to agree with the personality being infused in the books.
      B♭3

      Comment


      • #4
        Originally posted by Q Cubed
        amen, someone else who agrees with me that the house x books are an abomination.

        the bastard books screw butcher the timeline, tech scale, and everything else.
        I like that – “bastard books.” They are wretched indeed, and are not only bad “Dune” books, but bad fiction as well. I started a thread about them over a year ago where Ming claims that they are “fun,” which pretty much wrecked any good opinion I had of him. Check it out.

        i've read all of them except for the house corinno, and i have to say, anything after "god emperor" kinda stinks.

        the two at the end are flat out bizarre--especially with the super ultra mega powerful duncan idaho...

        god emperor's boring, really, but it's the last of the decent ones.

        my favorites are the first three.
        The two final Herbert books are part of an unfinished trilogy that remained uncompleted when Frank died in 1986 (or so). There was supposed to be a third book that wrapped it all up but it was in the note phase, with very little actual writing done on it.

        Most people didn’t like the last two books because of the thematic disconnect – we had no idea, reading the first four books, that we were actually reading the Duncan Idaho Story and not All in the Atreides Family. Essentially what you are witnessing is the destruction of the Old Empire and the last few remnants of the Bene Gesserit fighting the overwhelming forces of the Honored Matres, rogue BG that left in the Scattering and evolved BG techniques to new levels, even including a method of enslaving men through the use of sexual persuasion. Because there are no Atreides left, the BG deal with what they must and resurrect Duncan in the hopes that he can become another Kwisatzch Haderach and help fight off the HM’s. He subverts one of the commanders by turning her sexual powers against her (the above-mentioned bizarre sex scene), who then (iirc) becomes the new Reverend Mother of the BG’s by the end of Chapterhouse, and is ready to either lead them to victory or sell them to slavery.

        A nice touch that Herbert did with God: Emperor was that he did NOT place the book within the exciting whirlwind of the Scattering but at the tail-end of 3,000 years of human suppression and containment. Instead of doing the easy thing, providing a book with lots of action and thrills as people escape their homeworlds to spread themselves out in the Universe, he tried to make the reader feel how oppressive, limiting, and small Leto’s universe was – yeah, he controls an interstellar empire, but his world is limited to a few palaces on a couple of cities.

        Comment


        • #5
          I liked all six but I have to admit I was an odd book fan over the even numbers. I never had much interest in the series until I picked up an early edition at the thrift store and thought I'd give it a shot. I can say definitively that the movie with Kyle McKlocklin(sp) was terrible compared to the book and I can see why my friends despised it.

          One of the things I didn't really understand was Duncan Idaho's significance. I mean, why Duncan over any other character, like Duke Leto I or another of the original Duke's retinue. The explanations in the book ("He was the only true man...") always seemed weak to me.

          I also wondered about how the possession was so detrimental to the preborn but never really affected those who were older when they first drank the spice poison. I mean, Alia seemed fine until she was in her twenties or late teens and then she suddenly has this inner battle. It seems to me the only defense would be a strongly developed personality but Alia's personality appeared developed when she was possessed.

          Well, I, for one, will be glad to get the Man in the High Castle off my sig. Worst. Discussion. Ever
          It's not much of a discussing type book, and I feel like it was one of the worst books by a usually sound author. Go figure, eh?

          Comment


          • #6
            One of the things I didn't really understand was Duncan Idaho's significance. I mean, why Duncan over any other character, like Duke Leto I or another of the original Duke's retinue. The explanations in the book ("He was the only true man...") always seemed weak to me.


            Iirc, the significance is the fact that his is the only cells remaining from the time before the Scattering, back even to the times of Muad'dib. I made the assumption that the Tleixlau made advances in their ghola technology, so that one that could eventually make Duncan a Kwisatzch Haderach.

            I also wondered about how the possession was so detrimental to the preborn but never really affected those who were older when they first drank the spice poison. I mean, Alia seemed fine until she was in her twenties or late teens and then she suddenly has this inner battle. It seems to me the only defense would be a strongly developed personality but Alia's personality appeared developed when she was possessed.


            Agreed - Herbert never really made that clear. However, I could argue that Alia's natal possession was thwarted by Jessica's bonding with her when Jessica drank the Water of Life, and her personality did not slip until she lost the protective, loving influence of her mother when Jessica went back to Caladan with Gurney.

            Comment


            • #7
              SciFi

              I liked the later SciFi channel adaptation of Dune. Usually, I don't have a problem with the set up of a SciFi story as long as it is self-consistent. When I first read Dune, I was willing to accept it. Now, my knowledge of biotech is a lot greater (as is biotech's knowledge of biotech) and I cannot accept that spice (an organic molecule) cannot be artificially duplicated. With genetic samples of worms in their various stages of development, it would only take the technology of today a decade or two to create transgenic bacteria that would be cranking out spice.

              For me, the main thing I got out of the Dune stories was the idea that prescience implied predictability which ultimately implied doom. This was a cool idea and once accepted logically led Leto II to initiate the steps that caused the scattering. I liken it to a surgeon who realizes he must amputate a part to save the whole. This was the struggle that was interesting to me.
              “It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”

              ― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man

              Comment


              • #8
                I thought the suprise angle was a little heavy handed with the Leto II story. I did like the big brother feel of the empire that was created. Does anyone think the attack at the bridge was a suprise? He seemed to me like he wasn't expecting it or maybe the way it happened but it's been a few months since I read that one say my remembry could be off.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: SciFi

                  Originally posted by pchang
                  Now, my knowledge of biotech is a lot greater (as is biotech's knowledge of biotech) and I cannot accept that spice (an organic molecule) cannot be artificially duplicated. With genetic samples of worms in their various stages of development, it would only take the technology of today a decade or two to create transgenic bacteria that would be cranking out spice.
                  Nonsense. When you can buy a shirt made out of non-natural silk, or a rope made out of spider-silk come on back and tell us. We're a long way from synthesizing complex organic molecules (in any fashion).
                  Last edited by SpencerH; October 7, 2003, 18:30.
                  We need seperate human-only games for MP/PBEM that dont include the over-simplifications required to have a good AI
                  If any man be thirsty, let him come unto me and drink. Vampire 7:37
                  Just one old soldiers opinion. E Tenebris Lux. Pax quaeritur bello.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    It's all about need. We synthesize human insulin all the time. Name any new biotech drug - it is a very complex organic molecule.
                    “It is no use trying to 'see through' first principles. If you see through everything, then everything is transparent. But a wholly transparent world is an invisible world. To 'see through' all things is the same as not to see.”

                    ― C.S. Lewis, The Abolition of Man

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      remembering only the bizarre sex scene between Duncan and that HM who then became the BG reverend mother in the final novel


                      Yeah, sounds about right to me.
                      KH FOR OWNER!
                      ASHER FOR CEO!!
                      GUYNEMER FOR OT MOD!!!

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                      • #12
                        I like Dune Messiah, but JohnT is right on the mark about the, ahem, spinoffs. They are an abomination onto Me and must be ignored and not bought in used book stores lest my wrath is provoked.

                        Being the technophile that I am, Ix was my favourite bit player. Meh.
                        Blog | Civ2 Scenario League | leo.petr at gmail.com

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                        • #13
                          Originally posted by Harry Seldon
                          I thought the suprise angle was a little heavy handed with the Leto II story. I did like the big brother feel of the empire that was created. Does anyone think the attack at the bridge was a suprise? He seemed to me like he wasn't expecting it or maybe the way it happened but it's been a few months since I read that one say my remembry could be off.
                          It was and it wasn't. Leto "knew" the following things:

                          1. That the Golden Path was assured whether he survived crossing the bridge.
                          2. That Siona disappeared from his visions.
                          3. That Leto must die in water.

                          otoh, he never knew

                          4. The moment of his death (other than how it would effect the Golden Path).

                          Therefore though he probably realized that there might've existed the possibility of his death, he dismissed it as being ultimately irrelevant for the larger future of mankind.

                          Also, towards the last year, he became increasingly erratic and less-cautionary because of his relationship with Hwi.

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                          • #14
                            dp... damnable lack of graphics.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I was also suprised that Leto II's Fish Speakers weren't more involved in later tales. Leto II had spread them all over the empire and I thought this would lead to at least a greater superficial control over the destiny of the empire.

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