Nerdist Book Club discussion
Dune
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Dune Week 1
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Rachel
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May 06, 2020 07:48PM

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I mean you have the main protagonist have his hand put into a box to induce extreme pain, told don't move and take it else you get a poison needle jabbed into your neck and die, and then told good job. You are human after all.
I will admit the terminology can be a bit daunting but it gets easier to understand as you go on as they repeat words often enough that you can understand their meaning thru context.
All in all, I'm really happy this is our next book. I hope we can come back in the future and get into the other books too. They are equally as fascinating and entertaining as this one.


Mostly I love the world building here. It really seems well thought out and like he came up with the world and how it works before starting in on the plot.
Honestly I am now going 'did I have a hangup about the book before because I didn't get into it the times I tried before?'

Did you read the appendix at the end first? It made so much make sense to me.

I haven't yet but I might try that out!

And now him going into the desert an outcast and coming back (probably) a savior, screams Jesus and many other religious leader myths.

I'm getting strong colonial arrogance vibes about the noble houses.
Baron Harkkonen essential thinks of them as a lower species and only cares about the planet and it's inhabitants in terms of profit.
Even House Atreides while well meaning has little knowledge of the inhabitants, don't understand their ways and especially with Hallek seem determined to try and mold their way of doing things onto them.
I'd not be surprised if Herbert took some real world inspirations from 19th century colonial rule in Africa and from things like T.E Lawrence in WWI...the desert setting immediately set of Lawrence Of Arabia triggers for me.