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reviewed Dune by Frank Herbert (Dune #1)

Frank Herbert: Dune (1978, New English Library)

Set on the desert planet Arrakis, Dune is the story of the boy Paul Atreides, …

Dune and the suck fairy (spoilers)

I first read Dune when I was about 11 or 12, and I absolutely adored it. This year's movie was excellent, and it made me want to reread the book, albeit with trepidation from all the critiques I've heard as an adult.

Re-reading as an adult was kind of painful. The elements I liked were all still there, but there's so much about the book that is just horrible. A few:

  • The intense homophobia, fatphobia and just outright fucking Puritan pleasure-negativity in the portrayal of Baron Harkonnen.
  • The cartoonish evil of the Harkonnens, which seems intended to make the reader take the Atreides' side, but...
  • The Atreides just being colonisers obsessed with their own position and legacy, but somehow the author wants us to see them as Teh Good Guyz because they're not the Harkonnens.
  • Herbert's weird feudalism fixation while he's ostensibly writing about an amazing future.
  • How deeply orientalist his portrayal of the Fremen is, when they're potentially his most interesting invention but he won't quite let them be.

I love the Fremen and the ideas about geoengineering the desert planet, but by the end they were just barely enough to keep me reading.

I don't think I've ever said this about any book before, but I strongly recommend just watching the movie and forgetting about the book.