Fantasy Buddy Reads discussion

This topic is about
Dune
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Dune (#1) [January 10, 2024]
The new movie cover is definitely shinier... no doubt attracts a new audience/generation of readers...

In Book One, (view spoiler)
Up through 75%--(view spoiler)

Tabea wrote: "Nirkatze, did anyone recently tell you that you’re a crazy fast reader? Like… today? 😅"
Yea... me and Nirkatze kinda read everything... we try to stick around and respond for awhile, but eventually we're 20 books ahead and details become hazier :D
Nirkatze is better at leaving detailed comments to everything, all at once, about 10hrs from now... I vary by day/book...
Yea... me and Nirkatze kinda read everything... we try to stick around and respond for awhile, but eventually we're 20 books ahead and details become hazier :D
Nirkatze is better at leaving detailed comments to everything, all at once, about 10hrs from now... I vary by day/book...
I haven't figured out when I'm reading this, yet... sometime in the next few days, when it seems right... almost caught up on everything from the first 10 days of the year...


I just wanted to be ready for the second movie.


Story narrative voice isn't the same after Dune. I've re-read Dune and watched all the movie/show makes minus the latest. The latest casting did not appeal to me, but I'll make time to watch at some point.
I have a lazy plan to read the up to 6--eventually.
What do ya'll enjoy in Dune?
I love the core cast (good/bad), lore & settings for space/planet, Spice, clash of 'religion' vs politics and the whole struggle bus to power.

With my original read through I kept thinking the book was boring and then wondering why I kept wanting to go back to it. Usually with boring books I lose interest real quick. But this one I did want to keep going. There’s definitely something special here.

Oh yeah and most of the intro has flat out gross jerkwads. 😆

What Beena & Iain said... though I made it 6 hours instead of 10 today, yay!
Finished this morning. It's really interesting reading this again... last time I read it was a few decades ago, in elementary school, and I was amazed at how much stuck with me. I think I appreciate the story more as an adult, and all the philosophical aspects.
I actually have an opposite feel with the book to @Soo--the beginning, through Book One, feels faster to me, and the second half more deliberate--but I can also see why others would feel the opposite, as the reader gets a sense of the oncoming (view spoiler) Unless y'all are talking about the movie. In which case I remember enjoying but don't remember any other impressions.

I’ve actually never read or watched anything of the Dune universe, not even the most recent movie. Admittedly, that was my motivation for picking it up.
Reading this in elementary schools though? 😱 (You were from Alaska?) it seems such a long and massive book and I’m daunting it even now. Probably gonna start Friday, let’s see how it goes 💪

5th Grade was the start of my bookworm life! LoL
Lord of the Rings, Dune, etc
My parents bought the Children's & World Encyclopedias. I read all of the Children's and most of worlds as a kid.
Children's bible 1st, then regular bible, all the Grimm's, Arabian Nights and Mythology books I could get my hands on.
Ok, maybe my reading love was always there cause the encyclopedias were before 5th grade. 🤔
5th Grade sticks out as the time I started readathons. There was a reading challenge for the year. We got stickers for each book, monthly, semester and year prizes. I read like 200 books in that school year.



🍿🍿🍿
YOU SUMMONED A POLTERGEIST! We, I mean I, need full story time.



Also there’s some really unique and cool names for places, peoples and persons. And then there’s… Paul 😂

Nirkatze wrote: "Started last night! Already 65% in... no chapters in this baby, eh?..."
The version I'm reading feels like it has chapter breaks, even tho it doesn't...
The main story is read by George Guidall, and the epigraphs are read by Davina Porter, so they feel like chapter breaks, and happen with some regularity...
The version I'm reading feels like it has chapter breaks, even tho it doesn't...
The main story is read by George Guidall, and the epigraphs are read by Davina Porter, so they feel like chapter breaks, and happen with some regularity...
Tabea wrote: "While most of you seem already done, I have now managed to read the first couple of pages. To me, it feels timeless yet old at the same time. My best guess is that’s due to no real POV, we know the..."
(view spoiler)
The pleasant narration, and my vivid memories of the old Dune movie leave me with some serious cognitive dissonance...
Baron Harkonnen, from the old movie: (view spoiler) ["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
(view spoiler)
The pleasant narration, and my vivid memories of the old Dune movie leave me with some serious cognitive dissonance...
Baron Harkonnen, from the old movie: (view spoiler) ["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>["br"]>
I read book 1 (since the table of contents splits the story into 3 "books"... decided to break the book into 3 sections myself, and alternate with Fifth Season...
There are definitely alot of vaguely memorable moments, but it's been years/decades since I last saw the old movie from the 80s...
The story may be slow-going, but I think it's pretty solid... you see alot of factions and motivations coming together in unexpected ways, beyond anything planned by anyone, which is always fun...
Looking into the book some more, online, I find it interesting that this is the book that proved sci-fi novels can be tomes... and that it was originally published as a magazine serial over the course of 2-3 years... as much as publishing changes, it finds ways to stay the same, with the ongoing trend of web serials, these days...
There are definitely alot of vaguely memorable moments, but it's been years/decades since I last saw the old movie from the 80s...
The story may be slow-going, but I think it's pretty solid... you see alot of factions and motivations coming together in unexpected ways, beyond anything planned by anyone, which is always fun...
Looking into the book some more, online, I find it interesting that this is the book that proved sci-fi novels can be tomes... and that it was originally published as a magazine serial over the course of 2-3 years... as much as publishing changes, it finds ways to stay the same, with the ongoing trend of web serials, these days...

I wonder if each serial was started with one of those quotes by Irulian?

To read, it always cost money. Cost more to be a student, write and read in any country.
So format and length have gone in waves of transitions. I am thankful to be in a time where book length is less of an issue and there are avenues of reading access that don't necessarily need money.
I find the trend for short form over length to be interesting change from 70's to now. It's gone back and forth. Lots of indicators about influence of advertising, technology, downgrade in education, etc.
My thing is, I don't care if long stories are broken into shorter lengths and still reach the epic page count & a full story arc. It's the cost of it. There's lack of price grading for book length. That's a personal gripe.
Sorta like Audible charging a credit per book in a series. Sometimes a series bundle/collection/omnibus will be released and you can snag it also for a credit. That's not too bad. Membership vs non price grading definitely skews for company but can be ok on consumer side if incorporated well.
- Uh going back to Dune. I forgot it was a serial release. Makes me wonder how the story was able to maintain popularity. Does make sense in how parts are in segmented format. Not quite episodic.
I used to get Reader's Digest. I definitely did not read those as much as I should have. 😅 But those were a good part of publishing shorts and some serials.
My version is narrated by George Guidall and Davina Porter… Davina Porter I recognize from the Sherlock and Mary series… George Guidall feels like a narrator I recognize, but haven’t heard before I don’t think… most of his stuff is Stephen King and stuff I haven’t read or wouldn’t read…
Soo wrote: "Guidall is the narrator for Longmire. He's old school and narrated several genres."
Yea... after hundreds/thousands of audiobooks, it's a surprise to find a narrator I haven't heard, but THINK I have...
Longmire is one I might try someday... I keep meaning to try more Stephen King, too... not sure I saw much else I'd try...
Yea... after hundreds/thousands of audiobooks, it's a surprise to find a narrator I haven't heard, but THINK I have...
Longmire is one I might try someday... I keep meaning to try more Stephen King, too... not sure I saw much else I'd try...

Soo wrote: "Guidall is the narrator for Mitch Rapp series by Vince Flynn. He's worked on SF, thriller, horror, classics and mystery. I like him."
I actually might have listened to a few Rapp books by him, when I tried a re-read and stalled out again around book 5, like the first time as ebooks...
I actually might have listened to a few Rapp books by him, when I tried a re-read and stalled out again around book 5, like the first time as ebooks...

Started the book tonight and I can see how much it has influenced more contemporary writers of both Sci-fi and Fantasy. The structure of the way it is written reminds me a lot of Stormlight Archives...

My mom appreciated folks's appreciation of her action in the poltergeist story...
Books mentioned in this topic
Dune Messiah (other topics)Children of Dune (other topics)
The Golem and the Djinni (other topics)
Dune (other topics)
Happy Reading!