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  • Dune: House Atreides (Prelude to Dune Book 1)
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4.7 out of 5 stars
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Dune: House Atreides (Prelude to Dune Book 1)

Dune: House Atreides (Prelude to Dune Book 1)

byBrian Herbert
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Top positive review

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Erich Kaulfuss
5.0 out of 5 starsDune: House Atreides
Reviewed in the United States on June 7, 2019
Satisfactorily authentic. Except for the focus on Duncan Idaho from the beginning, this felt more like a prequel to Dune than a prequel to all six Dune novels, which was fine for me because I remember Dune a lot better than the books that followed.

While the writers were playing in Frank Herbert’s sandbox, they are playing almost entirely with his toys without bringing many new toys of their own, so this lacks the outflow of rich invention that is part of what makes Dune such a mind blowing experience. This is not the case with the story, though. There aren’t many new inventions, but the story is intriguing and compelling.

I guess you could say Frank Herbert invented the car and drove it well. Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson don’t put anything new under the hood, but they do drive it really well.

Finally, I liked the way that the writers put little summaries of the story inside the story. For some people this may be repetitive or seem like dumbing it down, but for me it was welcome. I didn’t have too much trouble following the Dune books when I read them as a younger man, but I am now a lot busier, and appreciate these little moments where something like, “Leto considered the events that had brought him here. He wondered why X had happened, and when that had led to Y, he regretted having to do Z which had led him inexorably to this point.” Sure, it feels a little contrived, but these guideposts let me get right back into the story after a hard week and I appreciate it.
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23 people found this helpful

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Michel Labeque
2.0 out of 5 starsThe Missing Ingredient
Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 2018
First, I should say that I’m not a sci-fi reader: it’s just doesn’t feed me the way well written, emotionally charged fiction can. Frank Herbert’s Dune series, however, is exceptional in that regard and I’ve been rereading those books again and again over the years. I like the story line well enough in House Atreides, but it’s written by sci-fi writers, not great fiction writers. Their characters never speak in the first person, there’s no interior monologue, and as a result I didn’t really care that much about them. There’s no comparison with the way Frank depicts the overarching sorrow within Leto II as his transformation steals more and more of his humanity, as an example, with anything that happens in the current volume. What made Dune so exceptional were the deep observations and questions about what it means to have faith, how do we best express our truest humanity, and ultimately, how do we choose love over everything else that tries to seduce us. This book isn’t even in the same genre.
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47 people found this helpful

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From the United States

Rezrez
1.0 out of 5 stars Worst childish cheap scifi that you can waste your time on
Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2021
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Horrible horrible cheap space cowboy scifi. Has zero literary value. Reads like a first drama written by a mid school teen. Frank Herbert is tumbling in his grave reading it. The gravest injustice against Frank’s genius writing.
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EJ
1.0 out of 5 stars Adds a new meaning to the word horrible
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2003
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This is about the worst garbage I have ever experienced. It is a complete abuse of the Dune universe. It is effectively Days of Our Lives in Frank Herbert's Dune Universe - well, I say the Dune Universe, but even that is poorly applied. There are distortions between this book and the Dune universe, connections made that should not be (Liet meets Gunny Hallek? gimme a break), a complete lack of understanding of the dune universe (I think that the only thing the authors understand about shields is that they go boom when a laz gun hits 'em). The automatic crossbows are a nice touch....
I started reading this series with the knowledge that it was not Frank Herbert's Dune. Pretty soon, though, the discrepencies with the actual Dune books started standing out. As I progressed further and further, it got worse and worse... and my enjoyment of reading became more morbid fascination.
Frank Herbert has gotta be spinning in his grave over this one... and Brian Herbert ought to be seriously ashamed of what he has done.
19 people found this helpful
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PETER NOBLE
1.0 out of 5 stars Not your Daddy's Dune
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2012
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This book is dreadful. Brian and Kevin should feel ashamed at writing such dull prose. This turns the previous books of a master into nothing more than a franchise. It was so dreadful a read, I cannot be bothered......
11 people found this helpful
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Jasmin Niar
1.0 out of 5 stars Damaged Book
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2021
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Ordered it "new" but came in today and cover is creased and edges are show wear. The packaging looked fine, so I assume it was used.
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Jasmin Niar
1.0 out of 5 stars Damaged Book
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2021
Ordered it "new" but came in today and cover is creased and edges are show wear. The packaging looked fine, so I assume it was used.
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Babytoxie
1.0 out of 5 stars It's a prequel, whadya expect?
Reviewed in the United States on October 19, 1999
The problem with this prequel, or almost ANY prequel for that matter, is that, while working to fill in backstory for the fans, the fans already have an idea of how things will turn out in order to lead up to the original series, thereby giving no real payoff within the prequel itself - the story, therefore, is very paint-by-numbers.
In order to attact the attention of new readers, however, another disservice is done: "House Attreides" is written in a simplistic fashion to provide new readers with essential info, and this insults the intelligence of those who have followed the original series.
After reading this story, I shudder to think that someone may mistakenly begin reading the Dune series with "House Attreides" instead of "Dune". I would never recommend this book to a newcomer OR a long-time Frank Herbert fan. It is too simplistically written, and I agree with a prior reviewer who stated that it was written on the same level as Kevin Anderson's "Young Jedi" series. This book is not mature nor challenging; it doesn't have near the heart or ambition of the original series.
The most irritating point of the book for me is how it is peppered with the characters wondering about the secret of the spice. Well, any fan of "Dune" knows the answer, and while this is designed to give a sense of plot development to new readers, this technique is pretty cheesy and falls flat on its face for fans.
On one hand, I can't believe that the story of Dune would be polluted with this mess. On the other hand, I *can* understand it ($$$). Don't bother with this book.
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Valens Hawke
1.0 out of 5 stars It doesn't even deserve 1 star.
Reviewed in the United States on October 9, 1999
Is this a bad book? No, worse books have been written but that still does not make it a good Dune book. Here's the major problem with the book... it is too simple. Frank Herbert wrote Dune intricately with various symbols and social criticism woven in, House Atreides (and the sequels) do not do any of that. When Dune is read, it's not just a simple novel its a piece of literature, House Atreides is just a book attempting to go mainstream.
Other problems with the book is its use of language. It sounds too much like it is being in the 1990's while Dune can be read at anypoint without any era-dialect. It incorporates too much from Star Wars, and if you changed all the character names it probably would read like a Star Wars novel. Its characterizations are weak and completely wrong. Count Fenring is an insane killer, Shaddam is an immature, scheming Machiavellian bastard, the women are nothing more than spoiled brats, and Duncan meeting with Leto comes off as a soap opera plot line.
It has inconsistancies (which the later novels make no attempt to explain and create even more inconsistancies). This book is an attempt at mainstreaming not the continuing of a great work of literature.
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halda
1.0 out of 5 stars There's another 4-letter word for this
Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2003
I'm astonished that anyone who's read Herbert's masterpiece could possibly consider House Atreides anything more than one star. 5 stars?? Have these people lost their minds and have been brainwashed by the publisher into thinking that this has any merit at all so that they'll cave in and buy the rest of this garbage? And say it was good just because they want to believe it's good? Have any of them actually READ the original? Or did they just see the Lynch film and play the video game?
Poor Frank Herbert -- his genius work pilloried and degraded (by his own son, no less) all for the sake of ... what? Commercial appeal? Sheer greed? Stupidity, is more like it, and I was the one who was stupid in buying this book.
I'm what some would call a "Dune fan", so of course I'm going to be critical. But the only semblance to the themes, philosophy and imagination of Frank Herbert's undeniable classic is that it happens to use the same names for people and planets. The rest is like the worst sort of fan fiction found on some awful anglefire or geocities website.
It gets worse. This book is nothing short of Abomination. All of the carefully constructed ideas beautifully presented in Dune, from languages to technology to politics are more than neglected. They are trampled on, abused and then told to shut up and put on a smile while they get repackaged and pimped out to the public.
I admit, I fell for it too. I kept on reading page after excruciating page, hoping that well, maybe it'll get better, and sure, the plot is juvenile, but it's "Dune"! Now, I think it wasn't even supposed to be "Dune", but a marketing ploy to get us to buy into a third-rate sci-fi series. I threw away the book immediately after I was done.
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Christopher B. Browne
1.0 out of 5 stars Definitely not up to the Works of the Father
Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2001
The Original Dune Series (TODS) contained quite spectacular political complexity, and, over a period of thousands of years, the saga revealed many of the secrets of the Bene Gesseret, Tlielaxu, Harkonnen, and Atreides.
TODS has, throughout, the feeling of being a reflection of a rather "static" set of cultures, where everyone's thinking has been _strongly_ influenced by the thousands-of-years-back cataclysm of the Butlerian Jihad.
In contrast, the recent "Dynamic Duo" seem to be trying to fit today's bits of technological advancements into the 50 years that lie just before the advent of Paul Atreides; the natural result is that it suffers from not Feeling Old. Furthermore, the people in the story clearly don't _believe_ in the evils of things like computing; in "TODS," it's SO ingrained as something passed down for generations that it feels like something resonating in their bones. Instead, there's the "bubbly feeling" in this book (and the sequel, House Harkonnen) that Kevin/Brian would be happy having folks doing web searches and such. That just doesn't fit with the "world view" of the Dune Saga. They _should_ have been exploring what sorts of mental, biological, and political artefacts might be used to overcome the utter lack of automation in a universe where people vigorously rejected it so long ago that memory of it only comes from those with ancient traditions.
This book (and sequel) just don't have the feeling that what people are doing is based strongly on traditions passed down for hundreds or thousands of years. And sadly, none of what's introduced is really good enough to become such a tradition.
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Inchoatus.com
1.0 out of 5 stars Graverobbers!
Reviewed in the United States on August 23, 2004
WHY YOU SHOULD READ THIS:

If you ever wanted to know the crucial back stories of how Shaddam IV came to power, Leto met Lady Jessica or how the Tleilaxu came to own the planet IX (was this ever even a plotline in the original series?), then this is a must read.  You must be the same person who frets over why Captain Kirk would KNOWINGLY use the wrong button on his chair to summon Scotty.  You must also enjoy picking fly excrement out of pepper.

This book is also an excellent cure for insomnia with the added benefit of being non-habit forming.  We guarantee it.

WHY YOU SHOULD PASS:

Sequel books based on the works of more talented writers are often like that top drawer in your parent's bedroom.  It is best for the children to stay away from them lest they reveal something unpleasant that for everyone's sake was better off remaining hidden.  We have read stereo instructions more creative and interesting than this book.  It adds absolutely nothing to the Dune universe and should be avoided at all costs.  We question the need for two authors when one would have sufficed to create this mess.  One almost gets the impression that Brian wrote this awful, insipid book to exact revenge on his father for causing some horrific, adolescent trauma.  The Dune series was most known for the intricate and compelling "plots within plots within plots".  The plots and intrigue in this book are boring, plodding and constructed like some sort of literary Rube Goldberg machine.  "Plods within plods within plods" is a more accurate description.  It was known that this was the first book in a planned three book series.  After finishing this book, we were not anticipating reading further installments.  The feeling we had at the thought of reading two more of these books can best be described as sorrow and dread.  We read this nonsense so you wont have to.  Remember us in your prayers. 

READ THE ENTIRE REVIEW AT INCHOATUS.COM
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Dan Shaffer
1.0 out of 5 stars Dune House of Pancakes
Reviewed in the United States on September 30, 2012
Written, in 1999, Dune House Atreides is the first part in a 3 part series that details events preceding the Frank Herbert sf classic Dune. The total 3 part series is approximately 2,000 pages. That's quite a bit of material. So for it be worth the reader's time it better be good stuff.
Unfortunately, from the beginning this book and this series suffers on my many levels:

Set about 35 years before Dune, the book includes main Dune Characters Leto Atreides, Duncan Idaho, Trufir Hawat, Emperor Shaddam, Count Fenring, Baron and Rabban Harkonnen, as well Gaius Mohiam of the Bene Gesserit. In addition, there is Pardot Kynes who is the father Liet Kynes, the planetologist in Dune.

As a result, the reader who has read the Dune books will know the eventual outcomes of the events. In addition, if the reader hasn't read the Dune books, they will not enjoy the books as much if they read this book, because the authors give away some of surprises.

As for character development and writing it's bad. I'll admit the SF writers are never expected to be great at technical writing, but the simplistic sentences really got on my nerves in this book. Examples: A man attempts to molest a 7 year old Duncan Idaho. Trufir Hawat forces a confession of someone by torturing them then kills them. Definately, not the Atreides way.

There are major contradictions between this book and the Dune series. The most glaring of them is the description of free flowing water on Dune not only at the south but also at a location near the shield wall. Not mentioned anywhere in the series.

Then then are major contradictions within the story. The emperor afraid that Leto may expose his involvement with the Tleixau, yet the failure of the Harkonnens to expose the involvemewnt when they knew about it in detail and lost more from the alliance than any House in the Landsdraad.

To put it mildly, the authors fail to replicate the magic in any of Dune.
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