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Frank Herbert: God Emperor of Dune (2008, Ace Books)

English language

Published Aug. 8, 2008 by Ace Books.

ISBN:
978-0-441-01631-0
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
213308619

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different enough that it stands unique in the dune mythos

good example of a sequel that builds on previous entries while taking it in a wholly different and unique direction. honestly the best place it could have gone given the last three's uninterrupted focus on the same cast and timeline. it's weird and unique enough that you treat it like its own story, not as Dune Part 4.

but also lmao the gender politics and general political philosophy of this one. I looked it up afterwards and got a confirmation on what i had suspected earlier - Frank Herbie was a libertarian lol, big fan of Ronald Reagan too.

Did not change my opinion after 30 years

I read this book for the first time about thirty years ago. I have maintained for years that this very book is the counter argument that Science Fiction cannot be literary. My current copy (with a hideous cover) has been sitting on my shelf for many years now. Having reread (and re-enjoyed) the first trilogy, it was time to re-read this book as well.

More than with the first trilogy, it took a long time for both the story lines and the characters to properly develop. Apart from the main character, there are four other major characters who were a bit cardboard-ish in the first three quarters of the book, but who finally fleshed out in the last 150 pages or so.

The same goes for the story. A lot of pages are dedicated to describing the universe after several thousands of years. There were plots and subplots …

Review of 'God Emperor of Dune (Dune Chronicles #4)' on 'Goodreads'

Another awesome episode in the Dune universe.

This time, we travel 2000+ years into the future after Leto2 became the emperor and god of the known universe. This book deals with how his reign ends and why he wanted to be god.

Although the book does not contain that much action and felt somewhat similar in mood to the second book in the first trilogy (Dune Messiah), it never was as boring as that book. For an almost 40 year old book, it still touches on a number of themes and issues that are relevant to this day, although some feel dated (like the LGB section that was crinchworthy)

Overall, this is a worth book in this series.

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Subjects

  • Dune (Imaginary place) -- Fiction