Dune
discussion
what is the best order to read the Dune books in?






Which falls squarely under that banner which we call opinion. Sadly unquantifiable.. After reading Dune.. any person can easily decide for themselves whether what followed after is worth reading.. Each of them have satisfied my only reading criteria, which is; If I read past the first three sentences I will finish the book. If it can't hook you at the beginning.. It probably has no bait..
I think Brian and Kevin's Leto writing is every bit as compelling as Frank's Paul writing.. See? Opinion..

I find the Brian Herbert Nay-sayers overly negative on principle and they seem to let no opportunity go by to tell people their flipping opinion while degrading the newer Dune novels, which are not all quality but apperently seem to be enjoyed by a large amount of people. I have all the FH Dune books and all the newer ones as well, the only difference is that Dune the FH series gets reread every so many years,
Wow...ezmyrelda,if I followed that same rule about reading the 1st three sentences of a book with your review, I wouldn't have been able to finish it. But I'm glad I did so I can comment on how ridiculous it is to criticize someone for having a perfectly established reason for recommending just reading the original dune series. Character development is the meat and potatoes of the dune universe. You know what science fiction is? Apparently not, so let me explain it to you. You put people in a setting so different from our own, whether it's because of the time, technology, ect. You add politics, religion, and commerce. That's your skeleton. The rest? You add the characters, there humanity and how these people respond to this scenario makes good science fiction. You have nothing without characters who pull at your heart strings and that you can relate to. So before criticizing somebody for having actually taste in literature, you should check yourself.

Ignore this, the six Frank Herbert books should be read. Dune, Messiah & Children were originally one big story hence the feeling that this is one story.
But God Emperor, heretics & Chapterhouse are great reads as well.
Next decide for yourselves if you want to read any continuation novels by son Brian. If you do so start with the House of trilogy, they are actually very good reads.

Did you have a point in there? I couldn't find it through all of your crappy writing. I do actually having taste in literature. My rule is mine for my taste in fiction. Not reviews... I have that rule for people who write.. Like you do; Tediously and without a concise point.
Ahryn wrote: "Ezmyrelda wrote: ""I maintain they are not as excellent as his fathers."
Which falls squarely under that banner which we call opinion. Sadly unquantifiable.. After reading Dune.. any person can..."
The question.. Which I can see in the url up there asks in which order.. Not which ones..
If all of us are going to get offended on quality.. We might as well just say just read Dune because the rest weren't as good.
"But I want to hear about some stuff that Frank wrote notes on!" No, Just read Dune.. "But!" Nooooo only Dune! The sequels are shite simply because they aren't Dune! "Bu-"DUNE!!!!!!!
Some specifics why people think Brian and Kevin's writing doesn't live up might be nice.. But that would be way to much to ask for.. We're dealing with zealotry here. argue all you want about it and ignore context.. don't care.. for my part I'm out.. *mic drop*
Hallelujah! miss 'dish out opinions but can't take em' ezmyrelda is out. Now people can get past all the pretentious junk she wrote and discuss dune.



Yes, when I saw this topic, I knew the answer. The best order is to read Dune, and then skip all the sequels..."
Concur, Kevin. None of the DUNE sequels worked for me as entertainment. I did enjoy Frank Herbert's UNDER PRESSURE, about a fleet of submarines; it has nothing to do with the DUNE universe, but it's sort of a DUNE prequel in the sense that in that novel Herbert worked out the whole "minimum ecology" thing. Cheers! @hg47

So yes, if you want to deprive yourself of a different set of POVs on the Dune world, by all means stick with the one book. Read it over and over, because it's the only way to "be" in that world.
If you have a greater imagination and want to find out what else happened, run don't walk to your nearest bookstore. You may join the legion of haters, but at least you made the effort. If the haters ran NASA, we'd still be mapping Iowa rather than Mars (what? red planet? HATED IT, don't go!").

Feel free to take your own advice re: lightening up, Francis.


As long as you didn't mean Schlafly...*smirk*

I also am shocked to see I am one of very few who really loved GEOD. I thought this was Frank's finest work, as it invoked much sadness and grief for the fate of the Emperor...overwhelming me and leaving me utterly impressed that he could give rise to so much emotion inside me. That takes talent, and is how I can determine the quality of a work (the higher the emotions and feeling raised, the better the author).
Dune is a masterpiece, and Frank's original works should be kept in order to appreciate his genius.

I agree GEOD is a great book in the series written by Frank Herbert.

Dune
Dune Messiah
Children of Dune
God Emperor of Dune


Recommending not to read specific books is fair game, but please keep the discussion positive.
Please avoid spoilers, other than minimum 'book-ja..."
I would read the first one and stop, or skip to "children . . ." I found the books steadily less interesting.




It means they will always be very cheap at the secondhand store, and that's okay too.


Stick to Dune. Having read all 6 of Frank Herbert's Dune books, I found the first Dune far superior to the rest which seemed to drag, for me anyway.


first of i wanna say im still on chapterhouse, and haven't read any of the brian herbert books yet.
i agree with many here, the original dune is without a doubt the greatest book of the series, and stopping after godemperor, would be a good point to stop since it wraps up the main story.
i was not really enjoying messiah to be honest, so my tip to new readers is, dont stop after messiah... children of dune and godemperor were amazing books as well... after that point only continue if u are hooked on the whole universe like me and just wanna read more about surrounding factions.
i did enjoy heretics very much, not through with chapterhouse, so i can't give my opinion on that yet.
i assume the brian herbert books are not at all living up to his fathers standard, but i will see.
in conclusion, after seeing here that the order is not too important, i will probably read it in the order which interests me most, which is:
the originals first:
dune, messiah, children, godemperor, heretics, chapterhouse
then to wrap it up:
hunters, sandworms
then either:
paul and winds or the butlerian trilogy
then probably the 3 houses, but only because the sisterhood of dune seems to become another trilogy



When you finish, start over, none of the rest compare!





I will permit it to pass over me and through me.And when it has gone past I will turn the inner eye to see its path.Where the fear has gone there will be nothing.Only I will remain."

But as far as the practice itself (let's call it 'tapering off') is concerned--'abstaining, when quality slackens' is a fully defensible aesthetic stance. For books, music, movies, for anything.
Failing to 'segregate wheat from chaff', failure to identify the best products to devote one's attention to (dismissing the dross) is simply rational good sense as an audience member. To consume everything without selectivity, indicates one is not applying any discrimination at all; or suggests (falsely) that every creative product is of exactly the same quality as every other--without ever any variance. And we know that is not so.
Just sayin. If the Bene Gesserit had anything to opine on the matter, it would probably lean towards this.

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And so on...you can skip the rest of them."
I wish I had headed that advice"
Concur, Stavros. Every time I re-read DUNE I want more. So I watch the 3DVD William Hurt version of DUNE. I've tried to read several of the sequels; abandoned all but one, and that one I wish those images would leave my mind. Cheers! @hg47