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The Dune Audio Collection

The Dune Audio Collection

List Price: $25.00
Your Price: $17.00
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A complete imagination
Review: The main problem every science fiction write has to face is to completely outline a futuristic world without being obvious about it. Even historical novels face a lesser problem; the worlds they describe are at least partly known to the readers. It takes quite a balancing act to tell a story and describe the future at the same time, both plausibly enough to achieve a suspension of disbelief, and in enough detail to fire the imagination of a true sci-fi buff.

I thought Asimov had done it brilliantly in the Foundation series - told a great story and at the same time shown us a future universe. (though I felt he faltered after the first three). I read many other books describing different futures, but never really came across another rounded, complete universe description. Star Wars had it, but it was a movie.

Then I read Dune. The one thing that struck my dazed brain at the end of the novel was the sheer complexity of the worlds described here. Somewhere down the line in a complex tapestry of what I can only think of as a period drama was a futuristic universe of incredible richness. Here it all was - incredible landscapes, unheard of technology, well-rounded characters and incredibly dramatic situations. And it had one thing that Asimov lacked - religion.

A true future universe is always going to have some component of religion and mysticism; Frank Herbert evokes this in fantastic ways by borrowing freely from Islam and other religions to give a texture to the political plots that really elevates Dune to classic status.

The only complain I have; I bought the collected volumes, and its far to fat to read comfortably in bed.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dune - A Science Fiction Epic
Review: The book, Dune, by Frank Herbert is a futuristic science fiction novel involving loss and gain. The protagonist of Dune, Paul Atreides is the son and heir of the Duke Leto Atreides. In the beginning of the novel Paul lives very comfortably on his home planet of Caladan. He has the very best that his planet, similar to Earth, has to offer. Everything changes, however, when he and his family move to the desert planet, Arrakis, also known as Dune. Arrakis is one of the most inhospitable places inhabited by humans. The temperature is so great, and water so scarce that its inhabitants must wear stillsuits, gear that channels all of the human bodies released water into reservoirs that can be deducted from if necessary. Even the smallest amount of water is precious to the populace of Dune and its people have learned not to waste anything. Although Arrakis is extremely harsh to organisms that opt to inhabit it, there is one element that makes it special and preferred above other planets. It is the only source in the known universe of the essential Spice, a cinnamon-like substance used in foods that prolongs life. This Spice is the reason that Arrakis is a coveted planet among the houses of power in the universe.
Only a short time after the Atreides arrival on Dune, the Atreides were betrayed by one of their own and a rival house, the Harkonnen, captured Paul, his father, Leto, and his mother Jessica. Duke Leto Atreides was killed but Paul and Jessica, a member of the ancient Bene Gesserit order, (a group of women who have special strengths and mind reading powers) escape into the desert. Paul was left stranded with only his mother in the middle of the harshest place in the universe, fleeing from the colossal sand-worms, organisms roughly the size of a space frigate who inhabit the sands of Arrakis and react to and kill anything that they sense moving on the surface of the sand. In this harsh position, Paul begins to think up a plan for him to regain his title and all that he had lost. His mission was to rally the Femen, the native nomads of Dune and unite them to fight against their common enemy, the Harkonnen. Rallying the Femen would prove to be no easy task however, scattered throughout the planet in different tribes, Paul had to gain their highest respect in order to gain anything from this venture. Although Paul is very smart and skilled in battle, it would prove a daunting task to unite the Fremen, defeat the Harkonnen, and regain his position as Duke of Arrakis.
Frank Herbert's epic novel Dune is one of the greatest science fiction novels ever written, in my mind comparing only to The Lord of the Rings in its greatness. Dune is a truly timeless epic to be treasured for all eternity. I am currently enrapt in Dune's sequel, Dune Messiah, and am thoroughly enjoying it. Another aspect of Dune is the variety of excerpts from other made up books and biographies relating to Dune such as this poem,
" 'Do you wrestle with dreams?
Do you contend with shadows?
Do you move in a kind of sleep?
Time has slipped away.
Your life is stolen.
You tarried with trifles,
Victim of your folly.'
-Dirge for Jamis on the Funeral Plain,
from 'Songs of Muad'Dib' by the Princess Irulan
Even this little aside, irrelevant to the story, adds to the feeling, the mood of Dune.
Frank Herbert's Dune is an incredible story with superb writing. It is a great science fiction novel ranking in my mind up with the Lord of the Rings and other classic sci-fi tomes. Overall, Dune is a timeless epic that will leave its mark on our society for generations to come.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Dune is Smashing
Review: I loved this book. I liked how Mr. Herbert described various objects and habitats. The characterization is phenominal. This IS one of the best books ever.

What happens in the beginning of the book is a whole story of it's own so I won't reveal too much for those who haven't read the book.

The main character is a fifteen year old boy named Paul Atreides. His father, the Duke Leto Atreidies is forced to move from the planet Caladan (A planet that is rich with water and forests.) to Arrakis AKA Dune. Dune is a harsh desert world were water is scarce and food is even scarcer. The thing that the planet is best known for is the spice Melange. Melange is used for food, drugs, and many other things. Melange helps people see into the future, Starship pilots use it to pilot better. There are a few people who can have special powers by using it. Paul is one those, he is also the only male. The natives also beleive that he is their Messiah and that he will lead them to freedom.

Dune intertwines politics, religion, ecology, action, and adventure all into one story. I love this book and I give it a *marks a five into Paul-Muad'Dib's stillsuit" FIVE!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: One of the finest novels - period.
Review: Dune is quite possibly the finest science fiction novel ever written and fares well in comparison to non-genre novels as well. Combining elements of adventure, romance, political intrigue, sci-fi/fantasy elements and character study in a single work would be a daunting task to begin with. Herbert has successfully accomplished this in a fully realized and fleshed-out universe with a coherent history, economy, ecology and political structure. And beyond that, he uses this setting to examine such wide-ranging issues as the impact of technology on human society, the essence of self-discovery and the world-shaking (and potentially disastrous) impact of messianic figures on society.

The characters are memorable, multi-layered and possessed of plausible motivations. The settings are diverse and well-articulated as is the futuristic technology. And the techno-speak doesn't get in the way of the story.

Additional gems await those with a varied knowledge base such as the fact that the doctor, Yueh, is named for the Chinese god of epidemics.

Don't be disuaded from reading this marvelous book by the movie or mini-series. The first is unintelligible if you haven't already read the book and both succumb to symbolism at the end that is not in the book.

Dune is one of the (very) few books worth reading more than once.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Dont waste your time.
Review: This book was so incredibly boring it was mind numbing.
The first few chapters kept me going, but to get to the end...good god. I literally had to force myself to read it! The only other book I had to trudge through like this was The Grapes of Wrath...and if you liked that book, well then maybe this one is for you...

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: THE Best SF Novel to date!
Review: When confronted with someone who says "I don't read SF because I don't like it!", I always ask them what have they read? Have they read Dune? The answer is always no. And those who go away and read Dune, change their mind and usually will seek other quality SF novels to read.

I first read Dune in about 1967(?) as a high school student. I have re-read it many times. To me it was the first hard SF novel to FULLY develop and reveal an entire culture and history as backdrop to the story. Others have tried since; most have failed or at least fallen short of Dune.

DUNE is to SF what Lord of the Rings is to Fantasy; simply the best.

If you want to know anything about the story, don't look here, just READ IT! I promise you wont be disappointed.

I'm about to start reading it again in the next few days!

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A brilliant work with some annoying flaws
Review: Every time I read 'Dune' I marvel at the universe Frank Herbert has invented. The book's setting is dense, confusing, intriguing, and belies a strange understanding of the human conciousness. The problem is, Herbert rushes over his descriptions of setting to put us in some boring desert. I always end up wondering about Caladan and Ix and the Bene Gesseret the Imperium and all those other details. Not surprisingly, my favorite parts of the book were the glossary and essay on religion.

For most of the book I never really liked Paul or Jessica or the Fremen or any other character. I was interested in Paul's metamorphosis into a super-being, but I think that Herbert understandably has trouble explaining the shift into hyper-conciousness. And the way Herbert writes in general seems a bit undisciplined, a lack of polish and refinement if you will.

The 'Dune' universe is brilliant, but it probably made a hell of lot more sense inside Herbert's head.

Despite all my complaints, it's probably my favorite sci-fi book.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Perfect!
Review: To write about SF is very difficult, Asimov and Clarke are perhaps the first names that come to mind. Moreover, stories must be scientifically possible, at least a little. I think that Dune is not very SF, and yet, it is a landmark in storytelling. Frank Herbert conceived the best Political novels ever. His style, unsurpassed by any other writers, should be the guideline to future writers of this kind of novels. I have just finished Foundation, and some months ago I re-read 2001. These are classic SF. But Frank Herbert's Dune will always be the best political novels. Period.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: this is the best sci-fi can do?
Review: The main reason i picked up this book was because i'd heard it praised as Science-Fiction's-Crowning-Achievement. more than a few sci-fi fanatic buddies of mine found this book the dune series frighteningly addictive. they would say things like "i just got the 6th dune book!" while jumping up and down excitedly. one of the best sci-fi authors around, Arthur c. Clarke, even compared Dune to The Lord of the Rings.

sadly, at least for me, dune wasn't all it was cut out to be.

if not downright awful, Dune is _certainly_ no LOtR. LOtR has characters, history, rich cultures, awesome landscapes, and above all the vivid imagination of a smart, meticulous man behind it.

okay, so frank herbert was probably meticulous, considering he had to create the simply massive amount of politics found in Dune. is all the political junk why i gave the book 2 stars? not quite. politics don't thrill me, but they don't bore me to tears either. unfortunately, for some reason Herbert's endless, tiring banter did.

after some deliberation (after all, i hesitate to call an alleged Masterwork a piece of [junk] until i've thought about the reprecussions of such a statement.) ... i've come up with a theory to explain why Dune was so frustrating to read.

as the novel progresses, i found myself assaulted by a seemingly endless barrage of events, one taking place right after the other with no warning.
although this style is similar to LOtR, and many fantasy/sci-fi works, what is so disheartening about Dune is that the events are not explained thoroughly. sure, Herbert offers a paltry excuse for why the Atriedes and the Harkonnens hate each other, and he tries to summarize why the Emperor wants to kill the Fremen, but his answers lack depth. they don't make sense.

I'm not sure about others, but when something doesn't make sense to me, i don't believe it. plausibility makes good fiction.

inevitably, someone will call me an idiot for not understanding the socio-economic reprecussions of spice production, but this isn't entirely true. i understand it superficially, but herbert doesn't give me enough facts or history or first-hand accounts for me to gain a real understanding of his world. it's almost as though he assumed the reader could see inside of his head, something which we certainly can not.

even more disappointing is that Arrakis had SUCH potential--a desert culture more extreme than any on Earth, a desperate people, a royal feud...

sadly Herbert is so fixated on propagating stereotypes (Baron Harkonnen, the fat evil homosexual pedophile...Paul Atriedes, the young handsome messiah who can see into the future...shall i vomit now?...) and stuffing in as much action and politics as possible that he takes no time to develop the culture, the languages, the history, the characters...all of the things that would make sludging through 550 pages of political maneuvering worthwhile.

the result: i found myself reading on in a hurry, even skipping over sentences, to get to the good part that i could feel coming. unfortunately, none came, and i ended up feeling disappointed and more than a little betrayed.

best piece of science fiction ever written? c'mon, i'm sure sci-fi can do better than Dune.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: War of Assassins
Review: ...
The Duke Atreides is given control of the planet Arrakis by the Emperor. Arrakis, also known as "Dune", is the only known planet to locate the most precious substance in the universe, the spice. The spice controls everything. It prolongs life, permits space travel, and is also an extremely addictive drug. The Duke's son, Paul, and his wife, Jessica, must secure the planet Arrakis and restore control as orders by the Emperor. Their greatest enemy, the Harkonnen, threaten to retake control of the planet after holding it for 80 years. The Harkonnen try everything from assassination to invasion secretly backed up by two legions of the emperor's own elite troops, the Sadukar. Paul and his mother are forced to flee their home and their only hope lies in the Fremen, an extremely rugged desert people.

The characters in this story were absolutely amazing. Each one had is own personality, habits, and ways of doing things. They sounded like they didn't even come from the same author. They were very believable and make this futuristic sci fi story even more fascinating. Throughout the book you really see the main character evolve and change as the story progresses. He changes from an intelligent young boy nervous on a new planet to an extremely disciplined brilliant man. All the characters are extraordinarily well woven into this complex sometimes confusing story. Even the Mentats, human computer like minds, have a whole different view on things. Everyone seems like a real possible person put into those circumstances.

I strongly recommend this book to anyone who likes long, complicated books. This book really makes you think about everything. Most of the concepts in the book were very interesting. This book almost needs to be read several times.


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