Frank Herbert (nonfiction)

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Frank Herbert (1984).

Frank Patrick Herbert, Jr. (October 8, 1920 – February 11, 1986) was an American science fiction writer best known for the novel Dune and its five sequels.

Though he became famous for science fiction, he was also a newspaper journalist, photographer, short story writer, book reviewer, ecological consultant and lecturer.

The Dune saga, set in the distant future and taking place over millennia, deals with complex themes such as human survival and evolution, ecology, and the intersection of religion, politics and power. Dune itself is the best-selling science fiction novel of all time and the series is widely considered to be among the classics of the genre.

Opinions

Karl Jones writes (October 2019):

I read Dune and various other Herbert novels starting at about age fifteen (1976); by my late twenties I had moved on to other authors. Four or five years ago I re-read Dune and found that it's not as good as I remembered.

Then I re-read The Dosadi Experiment and said "Holy crap, this is some bad, garbled prose." And by bad, I mean bad. The *ideas* are powerful, but the prose feels like a ragged afterthought.

Consider also (but don't bother reading) The Heaven Makers, where excessively purple dialog is interspersed with italicized inner thoughts along the lines of "The fool, he will never see the trap that I have so cleverly laid — !" and "I must be careful that he thinks me a fool who will fall into his trap — !", etc. ad nauseum.

Other Herbert clunkers include The White Plague ... a handful of interesting ideas blown up into a vast, turgid exercise in letting the old man ramble on his hobbyhorse.

On the other hand, The Santaroga Barrier is excellent, and Hellstrom's Hive has also aged well in my opinion.

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