Markus's Reviews > God Emperor of Dune
God Emperor of Dune (Dune Chronicles, #4)
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by
Markus's review
bookshelves: science-fiction, 2014, hanging-out-with-mrs-kholin, the-cover-was-better-than-the-book, dune, read-more-than-once
Dec 17, 2013
bookshelves: science-fiction, 2014, hanging-out-with-mrs-kholin, the-cover-was-better-than-the-book, dune, read-more-than-once
Read 2 times. Last read October 24, 2014 to November 11, 2014.
Buddy read with Athena!
“I am a collection of the obsolete, a relic of the damned, of the lost and strayed. I am the waylaid pieces of history which sank out of sight in all of our pasts. Such an accumulation of riffraff has never before been imagined.”
More than three thousand years have passed since the events described in the Great Dune Trilogy, and everything has changed. Arrakis is now a planet of running water and green growth, and the days of stillsuits and crysknives are gone. The Sandworms and the Fremen remain only as legends from the Ancient Days of Dune. Only one part remains from the old days: Leto II, the God Emperor.
God Emperor of Dune is, logically, a book centred around Leto. However, that is precisely its greatest problem. The so-called God Emperor who so valiantly sacrificed his human existence for that of an emperor doomed to serve his people by living through the ages and preserving the universe, has turned into a tyrant. And everyone sees him as such, except for himself and his fanatically loyal Fish Speaker cult. It seems as if though the book is an attempt to justify the government of Leto, and that is a task in which it fails miserably.
Because of that, one should think that there would be other people to sympathise with. People living under the oppression of Leto’s rule joining together in rebellion against the monstrous tyrant. Well… there really aren’t any. The rebels on Arrakis are led by Siona, the last of the Atreides line descending from Ghanima, Leto’s sister. But in reality, Leto is allowing the rebellion to happen while secretly grooming Siona to become another of his instruments. Siona knows this, and knows that the God Emperor doesn’t want her dead. That, of course, makes one wonder what the point is about the whole thing.
Next to Leto and Siona, the rest of the characters are few and uninteresting. There were a couple of them in particular that were a bit interesting in the beginning, but my interest in them quickly evaporated into thin air. And when you don’t have any characters that are fun to read about, the book gets terribly boring after a while.
This book is actually not as bad as it sounds. The story was intriguing at times (not often, mind you), the great writing of Frank Herbert is still present, and the fourth book is just as much of a lesson in power and politics as the first three books. But the point is that compared with Dune, Dune Messiah and Children of Dune, three of the greatest books ever written, this one is a disaster.
“I am a collection of the obsolete, a relic of the damned, of the lost and strayed. I am the waylaid pieces of history which sank out of sight in all of our pasts. Such an accumulation of riffraff has never before been imagined.”
More than three thousand years have passed since the events described in the Great Dune Trilogy, and everything has changed. Arrakis is now a planet of running water and green growth, and the days of stillsuits and crysknives are gone. The Sandworms and the Fremen remain only as legends from the Ancient Days of Dune. Only one part remains from the old days: Leto II, the God Emperor.
God Emperor of Dune is, logically, a book centred around Leto. However, that is precisely its greatest problem. The so-called God Emperor who so valiantly sacrificed his human existence for that of an emperor doomed to serve his people by living through the ages and preserving the universe, has turned into a tyrant. And everyone sees him as such, except for himself and his fanatically loyal Fish Speaker cult. It seems as if though the book is an attempt to justify the government of Leto, and that is a task in which it fails miserably.
Because of that, one should think that there would be other people to sympathise with. People living under the oppression of Leto’s rule joining together in rebellion against the monstrous tyrant. Well… there really aren’t any. The rebels on Arrakis are led by Siona, the last of the Atreides line descending from Ghanima, Leto’s sister. But in reality, Leto is allowing the rebellion to happen while secretly grooming Siona to become another of his instruments. Siona knows this, and knows that the God Emperor doesn’t want her dead. That, of course, makes one wonder what the point is about the whole thing.
Next to Leto and Siona, the rest of the characters are few and uninteresting. There were a couple of them in particular that were a bit interesting in the beginning, but my interest in them quickly evaporated into thin air. And when you don’t have any characters that are fun to read about, the book gets terribly boring after a while.
This book is actually not as bad as it sounds. The story was intriguing at times (not often, mind you), the great writing of Frank Herbert is still present, and the fourth book is just as much of a lesson in power and politics as the first three books. But the point is that compared with Dune, Dune Messiah and Children of Dune, three of the greatest books ever written, this one is a disaster.
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Reading Progress
Finished Reading
December 17, 2013
– Shelved
October 24, 2014
–
Started Reading
October 24, 2014
–
7.93%
"Three thousand years have passed, and we have names like the Kynes Sea, the Idaho River and the Keeper of Jessica's Light, and a cult devoted to Alia.
The nostalgia is strong with this one."
page
36
The nostalgia is strong with this one."
October 27, 2014
–
18.06%
""We are myth-killers, you and I, Moneo. That’s the dream we share. I assure you from a God’s Olympian perch that government is a shared myth. When the myth dies, the government dies."
Dune continues to be a study of power and government."
page
82
Dune continues to be a study of power and government."
November 2, 2014
–
33.26%
""Watercourses will fill with sand. Crops will be choked and killed. Trees will be covered by great moving dunes. The sand-death will spread until … until a subtle signal is heard in the barren lands."
"What signal, Lord?"
"The signal for the next cycle, the coming of the Maker, the coming of Shai-Hulud."
"Will that be you, Lord?"
"Yes! The great sandworm of Dune will rise once more from the deeps.""
page
151
"What signal, Lord?"
"The signal for the next cycle, the coming of the Maker, the coming of Shai-Hulud."
"Will that be you, Lord?"
"Yes! The great sandworm of Dune will rise once more from the deeps.""
November 5, 2014
–
49.78%
""My brides," Leto said. "I welcome you to Siaynoq."
Idaho glanced up at Leto, saw the dark eyes glistening, the radiant expression. Leto had said: "This cursed holiness!" But he basked in it.
When Leto finally dies, I think I'll have to celebrate."
page
226
Idaho glanced up at Leto, saw the dark eyes glistening, the radiant expression. Leto had said: "This cursed holiness!" But he basked in it.
When Leto finally dies, I think I'll have to celebrate."
November 9, 2014
–
62.11%
"I've repeatedly stated that this series must have been a more important source of inspiration for Robert Jordan than even The Lord of the Rings was. Then I came across this line.
"When I am gone, they must call me Shaitan, the Emperor of Gehenna. The wheel must turn and turn and turn along the Golden Path.""
page
282
"When I am gone, they must call me Shaitan, the Emperor of Gehenna. The wheel must turn and turn and turn along the Golden Path.""
November 11, 2014
–
90.09%
"I'll have to admit that this book has been a disappointment. Nothing in it is as good as it was in the first three books. There was one character I had hopes for, but his introduction into the story proved to be disappointing as well. I can only hope that the last few chapters can save the book."
page
409
November 11, 2014
–
Finished Reading
Comments Showing 1-28 of 28 (28 new)
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message 1:
by
Shii
(new)
Oct 22, 2014 06:30PM
4th? I thought it was a trilogy :|
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Nah, the main series contains 8 books, and there are 19 altogether (so far). But the first three are often called 'The Great Dune Trilogy' :P
I think you deceived me. You told me "read Dune Shii, it's only 3 books long". Yeah, that's what happened.
Woohoo! Maybe I should update my Goodreads username? Though it makes me appear kind of untrustworthy, lol.
On a second note, I think what I said about Dune was something like "you don't need to read more than the first three books", but I'm too lazy to go searching for proof :P
On a second note, I think what I said about Dune was something like "you don't need to read more than the first three books", but I'm too lazy to go searching for proof :P
Nonono! I'm pretty sure you lied to me, you evil person! You deceived me into reading more and more books.
....
Well, maybe you are deceiver with good intentions, but a deceiver nevertheless!
....
Well, maybe you are deceiver with good intentions, but a deceiver nevertheless!
I'm not sure if I should read this series. I've heard good things about it for years, but I don't know if I could really root for Paul. Paul seems selfish and unlikable.
I didn't like Paul in the first book, but I still put it on my favourites shelf. And what he does in the end of the second book is one of my favourite fictional scenes ever.
But Dune isn't really about the characters, or even the story. I would actually call it a setting-driven series. The main focus is on the planet Dune, not on the family members of House Atreides or their adversaries.
But Dune isn't really about the characters, or even the story. I would actually call it a setting-driven series. The main focus is on the planet Dune, not on the family members of House Atreides or their adversaries.
I agree, this book wasn't as bad as the rating, I just didn't enjoy Leto at all. And I feel like this one just fell short.
Athena (Shardbearer) wrote: "Great Review!"
Athena (Shardbearer) wrote: "I agree, this book wasn't as bad as the rating, I just didn't enjoy Leto at all. And I feel like this one just fell short."
Thanks! I agree. It was mediocre, but it was nothing compared with the three first masterpieces.
Athena (Shardbearer) wrote: "I agree, this book wasn't as bad as the rating, I just didn't enjoy Leto at all. And I feel like this one just fell short."
Thanks! I agree. It was mediocre, but it was nothing compared with the three first masterpieces.
Anirudh wrote: "Oh even Athena didn't like it. Is it that bad?"
It isn't bad, we both agreed upon that. But it's so disappointing as a sequel. It had a few redeeming qualities, but they were few and far between.
It isn't bad, we both agreed upon that. But it's so disappointing as a sequel. It had a few redeeming qualities, but they were few and far between.
the basic problem with the series is that he had an idea for a book, and he wrote the book, and it sold like hotcakes, and people wanted more.
The idea didn't set up for sequels.
The idea didn't set up for sequels.
Anirudh wrote: "Are there more sequels after this?"
There are tons of them. Only two more written by Frank Herbert, though.
There are tons of them. Only two more written by Frank Herbert, though.
Mary wrote: "the basic problem with the series is that he had an idea for a book, and he wrote the book, and it sold like hotcakes, and people wanted more.
The idea didn't set up for sequels."
I don't agree. In time it might have become what you describe, but both the second book and the third one are in my opinion some of the best books ever written.
The idea didn't set up for sequels."
I don't agree. In time it might have become what you describe, but both the second book and the third one are in my opinion some of the best books ever written.
Althea wrote: "I'm pretty sure this is the one where I gave up on the series..."
I can understand that. I did so myself, when I read it for the first time. But this time I'm going to keep reading.
I can understand that. I did so myself, when I read it for the first time. But this time I'm going to keep reading.
I skipped to the end after about 100 pages. The ending was easy to guess. This is probably the most dull book I have ever read in my entire life. The intro was great. The rest was predictable. All leto does is whine about being so intelligent, yet his actions are moronic. I give your review a higher rating than I'd give the book.
Harry wrote: "I skipped to the end after about 100 pages. The ending was easy to guess. This is probably the most dull book I have ever read in my entire life. The intro was great. The rest was predictable. All ..."
It's definitely a dull book. I thought it was okay in some aspects, but I totally see what you're saying. And I am glad you enjoyed my review more, haha.
It's definitely a dull book. I thought it was okay in some aspects, but I totally see what you're saying. And I am glad you enjoyed my review more, haha.