Hardcover, 720 pages

French language

Published Oct. 1, 2020 by ROBERT LAFFONT.

ISBN:
978-2-221-24948-2
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4 stars (7 reviews)

Le chef-d'oeuvre absolu de la science-fiction. Édition du cinquantenaire. Traduction revue et corrigée.

Il n'y a pas, dans tout l'Empire, de planète plus inhospitalière que Dune. Partout du sable, à perte de vue. Une seule richesse : l'épice de longue vie, née du désert et que l'univers tout entier convoite.

Préfaces de Denis Villeneuve et Pierre Bordage. Postface de Gérard Klein. Traduit de l'anglais (États-Unis) par Michel Demuth.

48 editions

Dune is Dune

4 stars

Since I watched the movies first, I was happy to have one of my main fears dissapear completely during the first couple chapters. Many of the plot twists present on both movies are actually things the reader just knows from the start. The betrayal and the plot against House Atreides, the people behind it and the reason for it can be inferred quickly enough.

Herbert’s confidence in the world he wrote can end up being too much to a lot of people. From the beginning of the novel, characters throw around a lot of made up terms that can be confusing, and in a setting where Dukes, Counts and Emperors, Great Houses and Cults are still a thing, alongside intergalactic travel and human calculators, the politics and relationships of it all are quite complex.

The book doesn’t hold your hand at all. There are references and intriguing events from long …

reviewed Dune (Dune Chronicles, #1) by Frank Herbert (Dune Chronicles, #1)

New favourite

4 stars

The book is so packed of action, emotion, mysticism and lots of character development. Loved it. Coming from reading most of the Foundation series, I wasn’t sure if I me being a fanboy, Iwas going to like it another big Sci-Fi saga but I did. Can’t wait to read the next books!

expansive universe, exhausting writing style

4 stars

it took me ages to get through this. not because it's bad, probably mostly because i repaired my computer and had.. other things on my mind. but also partly because herbert's style reminds me of tolkien. like, a lot. at least in the sense that herbert really wants you to read his mediocre poetry too.

this isn't bad by any means, and i will surely read on in the future. probably around the time the second movie hits. the characters are fleshed-out and there's surprisingly little overt misogyny for a science fiction book that is, at this point, positively ancient. it's just the constant internal monologuing and then rushing through the actual happenings that gets exhausting after a while.

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rated it

5 stars
avatar for artsun@b.falai.se

rated it

5 stars