
Dune: The Butlerian Jihad
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Frank Herbert's Dune series is one of the grandest epics in the annals of imaginative literature. Selling millions of copies worldwide, it is science fiction's answer to The Lord of the Rings, a brilliantly imaginative epic of high adventure, unforgettable characters, and immense scope. Decades after Herbert's original novels, the Dune saga was continued by Frank Herbert's son, Brian Herbert, an acclaimed SF novelist in his own right, in collaboration with Kevin J. Anderson. Their New York Times best-selling Prelude to Dune trilogy (House Atreides, House Harkonnen, and House Corrino), formed a prequel to the classic Herbert series that was acclaimed by reviewers and listeners alike.
Now Herbert and Anderson, working from Frank Herbert's own notes, reveal a pivotal epoch in the history of the Dune universe, the chapter of the saga most eagerly anticipated by listeners: The Butlerian Jihad.
Throughout the Dune novels, Frank Herbert frequently referred to the long-ago war in which humans wrested their freedom from "thinking machines." Now, in Dune: Butlerian Jihad, Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson bring to life the story of that war, a tale previously seen only in tantalizing hints and clues. Finally, we see how Serena Butler's passionate grief ignites the war that will liberate humans from their machine masters. We learn the circumstances of the betrayal that made mortal enemies of House Atreides and House Harkonnen; and we experience the Battle of Corrin that created a galactic empire that lasted until the reign of Emperor Shaddam IV.
Herein are the foundations of the Bene Gesserit Sisterhood, the Suk Doctors, the Order of Mentats, and the mysteriously altered Navigators of the Spacing Guild. Here is the amazing tale of the Zensunni Wanderers, who escape bondage to flee to the desert world where they will declare themselves the Free Men of Dune. And here is the backward, nearly forgotten planet of Arrakis, where traders have discovered the remarkable properties of the spice melange....
Ten thousand years before the events of Dune, humans have managed to battle the remorseless Machines to a standstill...but victory may be short-lived. Yet amid shortsighted squabbling between nobles, new leaders have begun to emerge. Among them are Xavier Harkonnen, military leader of the Planet of Salusa Secundus; Xavier's fiancée, Serena Butler, an activist who will become the unwilling leader of millions; and Tio Holtzman, the scientist struggling to devise a weapon that will help the human cause.
Against the brute efficiency of their adversaries, these leaders and the human race have only imagination, compassion, and the capacity for love. It will have to be enough.
- Listening Length23 hours and 41 minutes
- Audible release dateJanuary 10, 2003
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB0000891XR
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
Listening Length | 23 hours and 41 minutes |
---|---|
Author | Brian Herbert, Kevin J. Anderson |
Narrator | Scott Brick |
Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
Audible.com Release Date | January 10, 2003 |
Publisher | Macmillan Audio |
Program Type | Audiobook |
Version | Unabridged |
Language | English |
ASIN | B0000891XR |
Best Sellers Rank | #4,458 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #165 in Space Opera Science Fiction (Audible Books & Originals) #196 in Space Operas #219 in Adventure Science Fiction |
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By reading The Butlerian Jihad, I finally got to experience the distant past, which was constantly but vaguely alluded to in the original Dune novels.
We get to meet the beautiful, compassionate Serena Butler, who's year old son, the murder of which, set off the rebellion, which eventually brought down the heartless thinking machines. We also meet distant relatives of Baron Harkonnen - Xavier (who is a good and honorable person) and Paul Atriedes - Vorian (the son of the wicked Titan, Agamemnon {a thousand year old human brain in a mechanical body})and Tio Holtzman (the revered inventor of the Holtzman Effect and other inventions). We experience the last stronghold of free humanity, with The League of Nobles, the fledgling exportation of the spice Melange from Arrakis and the precursor of the Bene Gesserit, in the Sorceress's of Rossak.
Background
The Old Empire was stagnant if not decadent and humanity had lost it's drive allowing machines to perform all major work and tasks. This malaise permitted a small but vicious group of twenty revolutionaries to stage a coup and take over the Empire. This group called themselves Titans and their bloody rule was short lived (fifty years) as the Titans being short in number, mistakenly allowed the Thinking Machines too much responsibility, whereupon they usurped the power.
Prior to the Machines "putsch" the Titans, striving for immortality, became Cymeks - Human brains housed in a cannister within a mechanical body. After the Machine revolution, the Titan/Cymeks became reluctant servants of the Evermind - Omnius, the head Thinking Machine. Humans existed within Omnius's empire but were mostly slaves with a few Trustees.
The Butlerian Jihad begins the epic struggle encompassing humanities rebellion against the thinking machines, which sets the tone of a future in which the total rejection of any sort of thinking machines is a reality. Our Story begins a thousand years after Omnius's victory over the Titans
The Plot
Although The Thinking Machines Empire (called Synchronized Planets) consisted of thousands of inhabited planets, there were many inhabited worlds still outside the Empire's boundaries, some of which had formed a federation called the League of Nobles (primarily as a defense mechanism). Though Omnius considered the battle with humans to be inefficient, with prompting from the remaining Titans (after a thousand years, there were five) and especially Agamemnon, the defacto Titan leader/spokesman, Omnius undertook the conquest of the remaining free worlds.
The Story
This first installment covers a period of some three or fours years of the epic conflict. During this time the main three characters go through many tribulations. Dune's incarnation of evil, Baron Harkonnen's distant ancestor Xavier Harkonnen is a Primero (General) in the League's army. He and the lovely Serena are engaged but while on a mission, Serena takes on a mission of her her own, a radical plan to save the besieged Planet Gedi Prime. The Plan is successful but Serena is captured by the machines and taken to the their primary world Earth.
On Earth Serena, who is pregnant with Xavier's child is given to the ever curious independent robot, Erasmus as one of his house servants. Erasmus who likes to think of himself an expert on human beings, has been studying specimens for hundreds of years and being a robot is indifferent to the plight and pain of his victims. He is intrigued however by the imperious but humane and unflappable Serena. Also intrigued is Vorian Atriedes, a trustee and the son of the bloodthirsty Titan, Agamemnon. Vorian who believes his father to be a hero and a great warrior is informed otherwise by Serena. Not believing her at first he is shocked when learning the truth after researching his fathers brutal past.
Meanwhile Serena gives birth to Manion a bubbly toe head. Unfortunately being an infant, Manion requires much attention, taking time away from Erasmus's constant inquisitions. Serena is constantly trying to help the other household slaves and Erasmus sees this is a way to remove the troublesome toddler and punish Serena by getting rid of Manion. Erasmus has totally misjudged the situation and instead of finding Serena properly cowled he finds rage and his action was the catalyst that provided the spark which started a world wide rebellion.
With the entire planet in turmoil Vorian being a Trustee and using subterfuge gains possession of a ship which allows Serena, another Trustee named Iglis Ginjo, and himself to escape to Serena's home planet, Salsua Secundus.
It is a this point that Serena enjoins the entire free human race to rededicate themselves to a rejuvenated holy war - A Jihad against the Thinking Machines. From this point forward Serena Butler is known as the Priestess of the Jihad.
For those of you that don't know, The Butlerian Jihad takes place ten thousand years before the time of originator Frank Herberts immensely popular book, Dune. It is a collaboration between Brian Herbert (Frank's son)and Kevin Anderson. It is the forth book co-written by these authors that I know of, having just finished another trilogy/prequel, The House series (House Atriedes, Harkonnen and Corrin).
Unlike some other reviewers, I found The Butlerian Jihad to be an exceptional book. I believe it to be Herbert/Anderson's most accomplished manuscript. I finally got to experience the past which was vaguely alluded to in Dune.
We get to meet the beautiful, compassionate Serena Butler, who's son, the murder of which, set off the rebellion, which eventually brought down the heartless thinking machines. We also meet distant relatives of Baron Harkonnen - Xavier (who is a good and honorable person) and Paul Atriedes - Vorian (the son of the wicked Titan, Agamemnon {a thousand year old human brain in a robot body})and Tio Holtzman (the revered inventor of the Holtzman Effect and other inventions). We experience the last stronghold of free humanity, with The League of Nobles, the fledgling exportation of the spice Melange from Arrakis and the precursor of the Bene Gesserit, in the Sorceress's of Rossak.
As with the original Dune, the authors create numerous civilizations in a Universe dwelling on millions of planets and then embellish it with devious evil characters and their requisite counterpoints. It may be ten thousand years in the past from Dune but they are everybit as advanced to us, as we are to Neanderthals.
I found this book, consisting of 695 pages, to be an enthralling read. True, the chapters are numerous and short but the story is huge so it couldn't be overly detailed, or the book would have been unwieldy. We are, after all, talking about a Universal Epic in which the authors followed about fifteen main characters on six different planets and in space. As with Dune we are treated to an excellent page turning science fiction novel with religious undertones.
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• As a story in its own right I thought it was very good, it moved along at a good pace and whilst it is very definitely science fiction it does not overdo the science to point where you struggle to understand it. I liked the main characters (even some of the Titans who were obviously the bad guys) and even the interaction between humans and the thinking machines was plausible and felt sufficiently real.
• It was also fascinating, having read Dune, to try and fast forward in one’s own mind to see how a particular storyline culminates in the original Dune novel. For example riding of the sand worms
• I found the political tension that the apparent hypocrisy of the humans intriguing. On the one hand you had the free humans of the League of Nobles and the un-aligned planets hating the thinking machines for their takeover of vast amounts of the universe and terrible conditions that humans lived in on these Synchronised worlds. At the same time these free humans see nothing wrong in enslaving a subset of humans belonging to religious groups who worship the Budallah. The justification for this apparent hypocrisy is that these religious groups did not join the original fight against the machines and therefore slavery is a just punishment to enable them to ‘pay off’ the debt they owe the other humans for keeping them free. These two storylines move along similar lines and both end up with rebellions. It will be interesting to see how these two themes resolve themselves in the later novels.
Like most books one reads there are downsides and from my point of view the biggest downsides of the book are:
• I felt the chapters were too short, sometimes you would read a 4 or 5 page chapter only to move onto another strand of the story in the next chapter. I would have preferred less jumping around which could have been achieved by merging some of the chapters together
• Linked to the point above are the ‘sayings’ at the start of each chapter, given the number of chapters the novelty of these saying had worn away by the end.
• I found it difficult at times to keep track of the timeline. The book covers a period of 3 or 4 years (I think), but it wasn’t always easy to keep track as there would some considerable jumps and in places it was only Serena’s pregnancy that enabled me to keep up. It would have been helpful if some of the sayings at the start of a chapter had been replaced by a date so that the passage of time could be more easily tracked
Whilst it did have downsides, these were no big enough to detract from the overall enjoyment I got from reading the book.

Would have loved this to be able to fill in back stories and wanted to like th book, but the writing was simply un-engaging in my opinion, so will not by trying any more.

I must say I love the ideas and story, but find Anderson's writing style annoying in over-filling the story with too many characters and then changing characters and story-lines EVERY CHAPTER. I find it less annoying in this dune series than in his saga of the seven suns, however.

The book does have the lines of continuity that clearly link it to the original series, but these are loose enough that you do not feel that you know what will happen next. This is in part due to the authors having the freedom of knowing their readers do have the patience for a saga over several books.

I liked the role reversals - having a Harkonen as the Saviour of Humanity and the original Atreides as a Trustee of the Computer Evermind.
If you are looking for a book in the same magnitude as Dune then you will be disappointed but if it’s simply a yarn in the same universe then it will entertain you. Give it a try.