Damn. I thought I only had to read the first one but the list says Dune CHRONICLES. I have to read ALL of them before I can cross them off. Almost everyone I talked to said the first book is the best and the rest aren't as good.
The fist book was.. uh.. OK, I guess. It wasn't great. There were a lot of opportunities to make things really epic that just weren't taken. Most of the battles could have been more exciting. Feyd-Rautha Harkonen fights a gladiator in one chapter and that combat sequence is done well but the other ones are lacking somehow. The big battles are also glossed over and slow. You can do so much more with those sand worms.. but again, you only get a glimpse. There are chances for so much epic awesomeness but maybe that's not what Herbert is good at.
For all of his talk about "feints within feints" and plots and secrecy, the characters sure seem to be rather black and white. Barron Vladimir Harkonen is clearly E V I L. He is also fat and Russian.. predictable for a cold war era author perhaps. Paul, on the other hand, is always good. He is brave and strong and smart. He leads the Fremen in the desert against their.. Russian.. oppressors.. Hello? Afghanistan?
There are some neat plot twists and turns, but the reader always knows about them. They are secret from the characters but not the audience. I suppose I'm more used to having to figure things out or discover the nuanced details of the characters as you progress thru the book.. but that doesn't really happen here.
I guess we'll see what the other two have to offer..
**Addendum: not much is the answer. I got 100+ pages thru Messiah and NOTHING has happened. Revenant Duncan Idaho is neat. The naked sword-fight against the practice drone was neat.. but that is all that there was in the first half of the book. I had accidentally started reading Children of Dune first and didn't even realize it. It was totally ho-hum too.
He does write pretty, though. These are three of many great passages.
Dune P31
Paul shrugged. " Then she said a good ruler has to learn his planet's language, that it's different for every world. And I thought she meant they didn't speak Galach or Arrakis, but she said that wasn't it at all. She said she meant the language of the rocks and the growing things, the language you don't just hear with your ears. And I said that's what Dr. Yueh calls the mastery of life.".
Dune p230
What do you despise? by this are you truly known.
Dune p277
And I am a desert creature, Kynes thought. You see me, Father? I am a desert creature.
He felt the bubble lift him, felt it break and the dust whirlpool engulf him, dragging him down into the cool darkness. For a moment, the sensation of coolness and moisture were blessed relief. Then, as his planet killed him, it occurred to Kynes that his father and all the other scientists were wrong, that the most persistent principles of the universe were accident and error.
Even the hawks could appreciate these facts.
Messiah p19
"We of the Tleilexu believe that in all the universe there is only one insatiable appetite of matter, that energy is the only true solid. And energy learns. Hear me well, princes: energy learns. This we call power"
No comments:
Post a Comment