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Free Ebook , by Frank Herbert

Free Ebook , by Frank Herbert

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, by Frank Herbert

, by Frank Herbert


, by Frank Herbert


Free Ebook , by Frank Herbert

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, by Frank Herbert

Product details

File Size: 576 KB

Print Length: 340 pages

Publisher: Ace (February 5, 2008)

Publication Date: February 5, 2008

Sold by: Penguin Group (USA) LLC

Language: English

ASIN: B0011UGNDG

Text-to-Speech:

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Word Wise: Enabled

Lending: Not Enabled

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Amazon Best Sellers Rank:

#2,057 Paid in Kindle Store (See Top 100 Paid in Kindle Store)

This book is considered by many to be the weakest of them. Untrue, its whole point is a bridge between the 2nd and 3rd books and does a good job showing the flaws of the messiah complex. As with all 6 original Frank Herbert books, this is required reading if you are a science fiction fan. Or just a fan of a really good set of books in general. These books contain philosophical, political and social lessons by a truly brilliant man that are scarily accurate especially today.

This first sequel to Dune is only about 330 pages long, but it's still a dense and complex read. Dune Messiah picks up the story of Paul Maud'Dib 12 years after Dune, now the Emperor of the Known Universe- and as powerless as he ever. While a challenging read, Dune Messiah lacks the narrative drive of its predecessor, since there is no longer compelling villains like the Harkonnens to help propel the story forward and keep things moving. Plot threads and characters from the original that were implied to be of great importance in the future only warrant a brief mention or are totally ignored; likewise, Dune Messiah continues Herbert's tendency from the original to not depict major events or plot twists, but leave them only to discussion after the fact The original Dune, for all its thematic complexity, was still a fairly straightforward "hero leads a rebellion against evil villains" tale; in the sequel, there is a conspiracy in place against Paul Maud'Dib, but the novel spends more time on philosophical discussion than it does on investigating and unmasking this conspiracy. There is, however, a lengthy section of the novel about 2/3 of the way through, which sees the main character going out in disguise among the people, deliberately walking into a trap, and fully aware of how events will proceed due to his unique prescient abilities - this section alone is some of the finest crafted storytelling I've ever read, and it alone resuscitated the novel. (Or awakened the Sleeper, if you're a hardcore Dune fan.) Dune Messiah is a quick read, despite the denseness of the work. It's still worth reading, but at times it feels more like an epilogue to a more compelling story that preceded it. (Think less Empire Strikes Back and more Scouring of the Shire from Lord of the Rings.)

Picking up a sequel 13 years after reading the first book should have made the book completely inaccessible. However, a quick trip through the Dune Wikipedia entry and I was ready to go. So ready, in fact, that I devoured this book in 2 days, whereas I remember Dune taking closer to 2 weeks. I also remember, while reading the first installment in this series, needing to have a glass of water with me the entire time I read -- and feeling incredibly guilty for every sip I took. The sequel created less of an immersive feel, but the world-building is still insanely detailed. A touch inaccessible a times, but showing how well Herbert knows his world(s) and doling out information only as the reader needs it.For an epic science-fantasy, there was a lot of sitting around and talking in this book. But when the talking is about managing a world-spanning galactic invasion and a conspiracy to destroy that invasion from within, the lack of "traditional" action is never felt. Things still end with a bang (literally), as the tensions mount and mount.I definitely understand why this book was combined with its sequel when SyFy made its second miniseries. However, as much as I love that miniseries, I also found that I thoroughly enjoyed the philosophical meanderings in this book about what it means to be a man -- and a god. I'm very glad that I read this, even over a decade after my introduction to Herbert's amazing universe.

I read the first novel in 1984. Not sure why I didn't jump right into the second back then. Now I've read the second novel. I had a rough idea of where the plot would go from watching the Children of Dune miniseries on SyFy, but of course, the series couldn't touch the intellectual content of the original source material. In the forward, the author's son tells the reader that many people were disappointed by this first sequel when it was first published, and I can understand why. Paul seems to have achieved total victory at the end of the first novel. In the opening pages of the sequel we see that his reign is anything but benevolent, and by the end of the novel all we can really say is that things could have gone worse for the "hero" of the first book. We certainly didn't get any kind of repeat of the unqualified happy ending of the first installment.Still, I really enjoyed it. My only complaint is that the author never made it really clear why Paul was powerless to stop the galactic jihad being waged in his name. If anyone can point me to any scholarship on this, I would be grateful.

Okay, I am still awestruck by the climax. I enjoyed the ending of Dune Messiah more than Dune, but sadly this was not Dune. This book could easily have been a 5 star for me, had it been a standalone book, but it's natural to get into a series expecting the same amount of brilliance you experienced in the first book and that is where Dune Messiah failed a bit. It was haywire in the middle, when it came to conveying philosophical messages, Paul's thought process, and some miscellaneous scenes with the Guild and the Fremen. Plus, I missed Jessica, my favorite Bene Gesserit.But trust me, the unpredictable ending makes up for it. Every single bit of it. That, and Duncan Idaho.And in the 21st century's lingo, "Paul, you are the dopest! Hang in there."

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