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What Book(s) Do You Re-read?
#11
Havard Wrote:The Zahn novels are great, I agree. I may have to reread those one of these days.

I am also a big fan of the Dune novels, especially Dune and God Emperor.

-Havard

Dune seems to be the one novel I keep intending to read but I always wind up going to something else. I'm always torn between reading just the original Dune works by Frank Herbert or reading all the Dune stuff currently available. I just never have pulled the trigger for some reason. I have watched the original movie and both of the Sci-Fi channel movies repeatedly.
I sporadically blog (mostly) about role-playing topics at The Semi-Retired Gamer.

Currently reading Dave Arneson's True Genius by Robert J. Kuntz.
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#12
finarvyn Wrote:Apologies for the huge OT here. This would probably make a great thread of its own. :lol:

Havard Wrote:I am also a big fan of the Dune novels, especially Dune and God Emperor.
Dune frustrates me. I really love the first book and have read it many times, but the second book seemed only around half as good as the first and the third only half as good as the second. I never got around to 4-6.

Then Brian Herbert started doing books in the Dune universe. I like the "House" trilogy but not so much the "Machine" trilogy and have gotten to the point where I quit buying the books.

Wikipedia lists the following novels as being in the "Dune Franchise" (note that I didn't include any short stories in my list)
01. The Butlerian Jihad
02. The Machine Crusade
03. The Battle of Corrin
04. Sisterhood of Dune
05. Mentats of Dune
06. House Atreides
07. House Harkonnen
08. House Corrino
09a. Paul of Dune (Parts II, IV & VI)
10a. The Winds of Dune (Part II)
11. Dune
09b. Paul of Dune (Parts I, III, V & VII)
10b. The Winds of Dune (Part IV)
12. Dune Messiah
10c. The Winds of Dune (Parts I, III, & V)
13. Children of Dune
14. Leto of Dune
15. God Emperor of Dune
16. Heretics of Dune
17. Chapterhouse: Dune
18. Hunters of Dune

That's just too darned many books. My brain hits overload so I've been trying to decide what constitutes for me "core Dune" and have a couple of options.

Option 1:
1. Dune 8)

Option 2:
1. House Atreides
2. House Harkonnen
3. House Corinno
4. Dune
5. Paul of Dune
6. Dune Messiah
(7. Children of Dune)

What Option 2 does for me is to contain "my" Dune to the main characters of the original book, and the events immediatly before and after the original. It would have Paul in the last three books and Paul's father Leto in the first three.

I'm torn about Children of Dune but I think I'd include it in "my" Dune because (1) it was part of the original trilogy, and (2) I also have the SciFi miniseries on DVD.

As you drift farther in either direction from the original I have this sense that it's "not Dune" anymore because the characters are all different. I have the same feeling for Star Wars prequels that go back 1000 years to look at the early Jedi. Yawn. Give me Luke and the events right around where he was significant.

Just my two coppers.

Have you read Road to Dune? I found it very interesting when compared to the movies. It really makes me want to read the Dune novels.
I sporadically blog (mostly) about role-playing topics at The Semi-Retired Gamer.

Currently reading Dave Arneson's True Genius by Robert J. Kuntz.
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#13
Raphael Pinthus Wrote:Reread, as in, in a cultish, regular way? None.

Reread, as in, done so in the past, probably going to do so, again? - A couple. Smile

Namely, anything by Camus, Poe, and a German poet called Heym. Genre books, well, the Osten Ard novels by Tad Williams about every few years.
Up there, "The First King of Shannara", which is probably my favorite fantasy novel of all time. Also, the ENTIRETY of the Foster Prince Valiant run, whenever I have a flu that doesn't go away after a day, or so. Smile

I have Memory, Sorrow, & Thorn on my to read list...
I sporadically blog (mostly) about role-playing topics at The Semi-Retired Gamer.

Currently reading Dave Arneson's True Genius by Robert J. Kuntz.
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#14
RobJN Wrote:Every now and then, I get a hankering for the old Endless Quest books, and I make a few runs through Return to Brookmere, Dungeon of Dread, or, from the later series, The Fireseed. Great X1/X8 atmosphere in that one.

I've done that also! I still have a healthy stack of these in my parent's attic...
I sporadically blog (mostly) about role-playing topics at The Semi-Retired Gamer.

Currently reading Dave Arneson's True Genius by Robert J. Kuntz.
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#15
Semi-Retired Gamer Wrote:Have you read Road to Dune? I found it very interesting when compared to the movies. It really makes me want to read the Dune novels.
I have it and it's a great book. It just doesn't really fit into the sequence, which is why I didn't include it on my absurdly long Dune booklist. :lol:

I'm not certain if I've read the whole book or not, but I've read "Spice Planet" a couple of times. For those who don't know about this, "Spice Planet" is essentially a proto-Dune. It's an early draft of what later became the original Dune novel. Very cool. 8)
Marv / Finarvyn
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#16
finarvyn Wrote:
Semi-Retired Gamer Wrote:Have you read Road to Dune? I found it very interesting when compared to the movies. It really makes me want to read the Dune novels.
I have it and it's a great book. It just doesn't really fit into the sequence, which is why I didn't include it on my absurdly long Dune booklist. :lol:

I'm not certain if I've read the whole book or not, but I've read "Spice Planet" a couple of times. For those who don't know about this, "Spice Planet" is essentially a proto-Dune. It's an early draft of what later became the original Dune novel. Very cool. 8)

True, it really doesn't fit in the sequence. Reading "Spice Planet" is what really piqued my interest in reading the Dune novels. Now I just need to decided on published order or chronological order...
I sporadically blog (mostly) about role-playing topics at The Semi-Retired Gamer.

Currently reading Dave Arneson's True Genius by Robert J. Kuntz.
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#17
If you are planning on reading the whole thing for the first time, chronological order might be the best. That way you get all of the history and build your way through the epic one step at a time.

If you think you might dabble in a book or two, you'd probably want to start with the original Dune and perhaps pursue written order. As I mentioned before, the original Dune is (to me) a head and shoulders above any of the others.

Just a thought.
Marv / Finarvyn
Member of The Regency Council
Visit my Blackmoor OD&D board
OD&D since 1975

"Don't ask me what you need to hit. Just roll the die and I will let you know!"
- Dave Arneson

[Image: Giladan.png]
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#18
Semi-Retired Gamer Wrote:I just looked up Pillars of the Earth and it sounds like an interesting read.
It definitely is an interesting reading!
He's a real Nowhere man, sitting in his Nowhere land,
making all his Nowhere plans for Nobody.
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#19
I can add Mario Puzzo's "The Godfather" to the books I read every few years. The blueprint for Godfather I and II, the novel is sometimes 60-ish cheesy, and even outright racist by today's standards. But overall, it's still a fine, balanced story that illustrates many aspects of the movies more diligently than the actors could.
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#20
Raphael Pinthus Wrote:I can add Mario Puzzo's "The Godfather" to the books I read every few years. The blueprint for Godfather I and II, the novel is sometimes 60-ish cheesy, and even outright racist by today's standards. But overall, it's still a fine, balanced story that illustrates many aspects of the movies more diligently than the actors could.
That's a book that I've seen before but never read. I just couldn't decide if it would be a good read or not, but based on your post I'll see if I can find a copy at a used bookstore.
Marv / Finarvyn
Member of The Regency Council
Visit my Blackmoor OD&D board
OD&D since 1975

"Don't ask me what you need to hit. Just roll the die and I will let you know!"
- Dave Arneson

[Image: Giladan.png]
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