Loved the first book. (And the original movie, on that I seem alone.)
Could. Not. Continue though. The first book reached the edges of what I can accept from a sci-fi world. Bizarre is the only way to describe what happens to the series after that. People aren't human in Frank Herbert's books, they are these drama machines with vaguely human emotions but zero human reactions. Maybe that's why I like the original movie so much, it puts a human face on these plastic, inhuman characters. It's not that they don't have depth. It's just the world and the beliefs and everything else going on in Dune gives them a perspective that's hard to relate to, to say the least. The one character you can
really relate to, Leo Atredies, well....yeah.
That said, it's one of the greats and has some existentialism in it that one may or may not enjoy. Which I always did appreciate about it. It's not about the lasers and the spaceships all the time, it asks questions about the nature of humanity and human consciousness.
Still. All of that goes overboard in later books. To the point where I felt completely alienated. I remember when I read about the J-bomb, and what it did, I pretty much put the book down there. Mostly because:
It was a blatantly hand-crafted plot device to ensure Paul gets to play the role of the blind Prophet. The whole idea was just so absurd. If you can build a nuclear weapon that emits eyeball melting radiation, why not just build one that emits radiation that stops people's fucking hearts?! Who the hell hired the guys who developed this weapon, another pre-cog who looked 150 years into the future to know that Paul Muad'dib would only be vulnerable to having his eyes melted? FUCK.
Other stuff like:
Duncan Idaho (best name ever), coming back as a Gholam. I remember reading that and being profoundly confused why the hell he even went there, other than as an excuse to try an inject some emotional drama and "twisted loyalty" themes into it. Only now do I realize that it may have been a reference to Jewish mythology. Still, there are so many places in Dune where you feel the author's hand so heavily that it gets oppressive.
I think Dune is one of the books that really soured me on prophecy as a plot device. In the first book it was good, but at the end of Dune you get a sense that everything was just a prelude to the real show, this grand stage play spanning time, space, reality and everything else. Now I can't see most prophecies as anything but plot devices.