


desertcart.com: Chapterhouse: Dune: 9780593098271: Herbert, Frank: Books Review: Supremely imaginative, full of wisdom, thrilling introspection - Introspective character perspectives that propel the story forward. A thrilling, imaginative plot, full of wisdom, that flows in river rapids, the currents of a sea. Written vividly and viscerally, developing characters through their internal dialogue predominately. Perhaps the most introspective novel of the series as the Bene Gesserit plan for their survival. Review: Exceptional - Another very good book. As he already showed us Mr Herbert is a masterpiece writer and this one just further confirms this






| Best Sellers Rank | #19,131 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) #61 in Space Operas #351 in Classic Literature & Fiction #369 in Epic Fantasy (Books) |
| Book 6 of 6 | Dune |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (8,277) |
| Dimensions | 4.25 x 1.29 x 7.5 inches |
| ISBN-10 | 0593098277 |
| ISBN-13 | 978-0593098271 |
| Item Weight | 2.31 pounds |
| Language | English |
| Print length | 624 pages |
| Publication date | June 4, 2019 |
| Publisher | Ace |
J**Y
Supremely imaginative, full of wisdom, thrilling introspection
Introspective character perspectives that propel the story forward. A thrilling, imaginative plot, full of wisdom, that flows in river rapids, the currents of a sea. Written vividly and viscerally, developing characters through their internal dialogue predominately. Perhaps the most introspective novel of the series as the Bene Gesserit plan for their survival.
A**I
Exceptional
Another very good book. As he already showed us Mr Herbert is a masterpiece writer and this one just further confirms this
T**S
Alas, we come to the end of a fantastic series.
In Chapterhouse Dune, the usual players are back with the Bene Gesserit and the Bene Tleilaxu coupled with the Honored Matres, who are hell-bent on destroying everything in their path coming back from Leto the Second's Great Scattering. Previously, the reader briefly meets the Honored Matres, the corrupt offspring of the Bene Gesserit sent out into the Scattering and Heretics of Dune ends with the capture of a valuable Honored Matre in Murbella. Fast forward to the present and Murbella is becoming more and more heavily influenced by the Bene Gesserit and starts to give up her Honored Matre roots to become a full Reverend Mother. In Chapterhouse Dune, Murbella becomes a valuable tool for the Bene Gesserit, both in giving them invaluable insight into the ways and ideas of the Honored Matres but also as a valuable advisor to the Sisterhood itself. In addition, the Bene Tleilaxu are being wiped out in incredible numbers from both the Honored Matres from the Scattering and their own corrupt Tleilaxu that came back from the Scattering. As indicated earlier, the Honored Matres are back from the Scattering and hell-bent on not only destroying every planet in Leto's Old Empire, but intently seek the Bene Gesserit's home planet of Chapterhouse Dune so that they may have a firm rule on the galaxy once and for all. Yet, there are some questions surrounding the Honored Matres that the Bene Gesserit begin to ask. Why are the Honored Matres back from the Scattering? Is it strictly their hatred of the Bene Gesserit and all it represents? Or were they driven back from the Scattering by someone or something? These questions are answered in Chapterhouse and the answers are fairly surprising. In come the Bene Gesserit and their quest to save the known empire. Odrade is now a full Mother Superior stepping in for the deceased Mother Superior Taraza. A lot of the issues that faced Taraza are on Odrade's plate now. A lot of the book revolves around Odrade's "mysterious plan" that she lets others in on in bits and pieces. However, Odrade throughout a lot of the book goes against the typical Bene Gesserit grain and she must balance maintaining order within the Bene Gesserit and it's few factions with battling the Honored Matres against the slaughtering of all of the planets they've worked so hard to populate. There are a few new cogs in her plan as Murbella comes to their side, as Sheeana gradually begins her training for the Bene Gesserit, and a new ghola of an old friend from Heretics of Dune are all part of Odrade's new plan. What I liked a lot about this book was the fact that the Bene Gesserit finally SEEM to be human. For the past 5 books or so, all the reader saw was a very manipulative religious sect that did whatever it could as long as it benefited the Bene Gesserit line. If it didn't benefit humanity too then that was just too bad. Chapterhouse Dune gives the Sisterhood a very human side as their new Mother Superior in Odrade struggles against time honored traditions and rules of the Bene Gesserit in her attempt to adapt the Bene Gesserit into the modern world and for once, saving humanity as well. The main reason I give this book only 4 stars, is the fact that the final battle between the Bene Gesserit and Honored Matres was a disappointment overall. I expected a little bit more of an epic battle/struggle/etc that what transpired in the last 40 pages or so. In addition, an improbable solution between the Bene Gesserit and Honored Matres seems a little ridiculous after their vicious hatred for each other and especially their histories throughout the last 2 books or so. Then the Tleilaxu getting very little face time in Chapterhouse and being passively slaughtered without a big fight really was a little disappointing. They were such an intriguing group in the whole plot against Paul, Leto II, and the Bene Gesserit. Yet, despite my few complaints towards the end, I still absolutely loved Chapterhouse Dune. I haven't enjoyed a series this much since I read Stephen King's Dark Tower Series and J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter Series. As others have said, Herbert spent 6 years just researching the concepts that would make the Dune Series alone and in a great portion of the books, you can tell it's very well-researched and thought out. Couple that with the fact that a lot of these books are going for bargain prices on Amazon Marketplace makes the series an even more attractive one to any potential Dune readers. I almost gave up on the Dune Series 3 years ago when I couldn't understand the first book in Dune. The terminology sometimes is difficult, but my best advice would be just to read through it. Particularly do a lot of your glossary reading in the first book and even though there aren't any glossaries in the rest of the books, you can deduce a lot of terms just from the first book alone. Above all, Thank you Frank Herbert for some of the best science fiction I've read. -Travis
G**K
Dune to Rakis
The story telling is, without saying, mesmerizing. I read them all for the third time on Kindle and it was even better than before. I read it in the past and much was lost on me. I read it now and, I must say, Herbert is 100% correct. The present affects your past. When I read it again in the future under a lamp of unknown and unguessed qualities how will I interpret his words then? You get out of this final chapter what you have to put into it. Spoiler Alert!!! This time around and, after reading his son's collaborations, I especially enjoyed the dropped hints that Holtzman was not the originator of the Holtzman equations. In the text itself he demonstrates that the written word of history cannot be relied upon. Brilliant. The second thing I noticed is the prediction of the Cycle of Government. Rebels, Entrenched power, Bureaucracy, Aristocracy, and finally: Oppression to maintain the status quo. It is interesting that this seems to be happening now. Or already has happened (again). Interesting Times. While this work it much more "cerebral" than Heretics, It winds up the Old Empire, the Golden Path, and the players of the finite game. All the crazy Atredies Heretics with their wild Siona genes going freaking wild in a infinite Universe. Unleashed. Finally. Sort of leaves you wanting more.
F**A
Se siete arrivati al sesto volume, sapete già che non si torna indietro. Ho acquistato questa edizione di Chapterhouse: Dune (copertina flessibile Ace, edizione 2019) per mantenere la coerenza visiva con gli altri volumi della serie che hanno questo stile grafico moderno e geometrico. È un volume agrodolce, essendo l'ultimo scritto interamente da Frank Herbert prima della sua scomparsa, e questa edizione "Trade Paperback" (il formato più grande, non il tascabile economico da edicola) rende l'esperienza di lettura decisamente più piacevole. Punti di Forza (Pro) Leggibilità Superiore: A differenza delle edizioni "Mass Market" (quelle piccole e tozze dove il testo arriva fin dentro la rilegatura), questo formato "Grande libro" ha margini ariosi e un font di dimensioni umane. Potete leggere per ore senza dover forzare l'apertura del libro rischiando di spezzare la colonna vertebrale... del volume. Design da Collezione: La copertina, con quel design astratto e la palette nero/oro/verde acqua, è splendida dal vivo. La finitura è opaca e vellutata al tatto, dando una sensazione molto più "premium" rispetto al prezzo di circa 11€. Flessibilità: La brossura è resistente ma morbida. Il libro si lascia sfogliare bene e rimane aperto sul tavolo senza doverci appoggiare sopra un fermacarte pesante. Aspetti da Considerare (Contro) La "Maledizione" del Soft Touch: La copertina opaca è bellissima ma è una calamita per le impronte digitali e l'unto. Se leggete mentre mangiate patatine, lascerete il segno (letteralmente). Inoltre, gli angoli tendono a sbucciarsi leggermente se lo infilate in borsa senza protezione. Carta Standard: Non aspettatevi la carta pregiata delle edizioni Deluxe. Le pagine sono nel classico colore crema/grigiastro tipico dei paperback americani; funzionale, ma niente di lussuoso. Esperienza d'Uso Tipica L'ho letto principalmente la sera sul divano. Il peso è bilanciato (non è un mattone come le edizioni Hardcover Omnibus) e la carta non riflette la luce della lampada, il che aiuta molto. Visivamente, messo in fila con Heretics of Dune e God Emperor della stessa collana, fa un figurone sullo scaffale. Conclusione Questa edizione Ace è il miglior compromesso tra prezzo ed estetica per chi vuole leggere il finale della saga originale. Consigliato a chi sta collezionando la serie con le nuove copertine grafiche e vuole un testo leggibile. Sconsigliato a chi cerca un libro "da battaglia" da maltrattare nello zaino: la copertina è troppo delicata per sopravvivere indenne. La Dritta in Più: In queste edizioni americane "Trade Paperback", la colla della rilegatura può essere un po' rigida all'inizio. Non aprite mai il libro di scatto a 180 gradi appena comprato. Il trucco: appoggiate il dorso su un tavolo, aprite poche pagine alla volta alternando fronte e retro, e premete delicatamente vicino alla rilegatura. Questo "scioglie" la colla e previene che il libro si spacchi a metà o perda pagine tra qualche anno.
S**R
Aight, this one was the most boring Dune entry I’ve read. Every single gripe, that everyone said about the continuation of the series creates a prominent issue here. Politics is less exiting and borderline boring, characters are just hanging around and talkin(like a lot) not many stuff happens. Kinda bummer Frank had to say goodbye to this series with the weakest Dune book.
A**W
Zur Ausgabe: Die Taschenbücher von Gollancz sind entschieden besser zu handhaben als die andere englische Ausgabe. Ich hatte einen Dune-Band von Penguin, wo der Satzspiegel und der Buchrücken gegen den Leser arbeiten und dafür sorgen, dass einem die Finger vom Auseinanderdrücken wehtun. Bald war dann die Klebebindung gebrochen und einzelne Seiten und ganze Bündel lösten sich heraus. Ich habe mich den ganzen Band hindurch geärgert. Die Gollancz-Ausgabe ist dagegen ein normales, ordentliches Taschenbuch, das man lesen kann. Ich empfehle es sehr. Zum Inhalt: Wenn man die ersten fünf Bände gelesen hat, kann der sechste auch nicht schaden, auch wenn es etwas unbefriedigend ist, dass der Autor selbst seinen Zyklus nicht mehr beenden konnte und so insbesondere die Handlung von Band 5 und 6 keinen Abschluss hat. Man könnte zwar gut nach »God Emperor« zu lesen aufhören, allerdings beinhalten die letzten beiden Bücher auch einige gute Ideen und tolle Szenen, insbesondere spannende Dialoge, wo (in gewohnter Manier) jedes Wort des Gegners belauert wird und schlimme Konsequenzen drohen. Dass im Kampf mit den Honored Matres und im Tagesgeschäft der Bene Gesserit Sexualität und erotische Abhängigkeit gebraucht werden, ist eine luzide Idee des Autors. Eine Sexszene, vor der in Band 6 gelegentlich gewarnt wird, ist zwar sehr irritierend, aber vor allem konzeptuell und also in der Darstellung recht zurückgenommen. Und das vor allem geistige Unbehagen muss man in der Science Fiction aushalten können. Auch wenn ich vom sechsten Band nicht besonders beeindruckt war, gebe ich gern fünf Sternchen für die Ausgabe.
A**L
This was a gift. It was well received, just what he wanted. Arrived very quickly on time for a birthday.
L**M
I wouldn't say much about the Dune storyline, and this is not my review of it rather just wanted to post photos of the book cause so many buyers like me look for the physical book photos (of how it looks). So I hope this would help them. The binding is very good, smooth and relaxed, convenient for power reading. Short Opinion about DUNE: So, the more you read the Dune books the more you realize that it's not just a Sci-fi epic but it's deep philosophy that Frank Herbert wrote, every page is full of it, and of course with dosages of an epic science fiction saga as well. Although at times very difficult to read and keep focus. So I would suggest anyone, to read at a steady pace and take more breaks. Right now there's so many YT channels about DUNE explanation and story summaries, so watching them also helps a lot. Cheers!
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