Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Review of God Emperor of Dune by Frank Herbert



Given the coarse, operatic nature of Dune’s two sequels, I was reluctant to continue the series.  I thought Leto II’s rise to power was an appropriate place to leave off in the cycle despite the three sequels Herbert penned. After posting my reviews of Dune Messiah and Children of Dune, however, one comment was left stating the first three novels were in fact just stage-setting for the fourth, God Emperor of Dune, and if I was to truly appreciate the series I needed to continue.  Continue I did, and though I still think Dune is slightly better, the fourth book is certainly a step above those between and does indeed seem a thematic pinnacle the first books were aiming at.

God Emperor of Dune is set roughly 3,500 years after the conclusion of events in Children of Dune.  Leto II, now with arms and legs useless appendages on a huge worm body, uses his prescience and hyper-senses to maintain supreme power over the known universe, not to mention his inhuman appearance.  Ruling from Arrakis where terraforming has nearly completed the change from inhospitable desert to verdant inhabited land, Leto’s Fish Speakers (an army of unfailingly loyal female soldiers) enforce his dominion: no technology, no interstellar travel, and complete obeisance to his rule, including its limited dispersal of the all-valuable spice.  Proclaiming himself god and starting his own religion, Leto maintains his dominion through belief and fear in holding to the Golden Path.

The result of Leto’s program is pleasantly bucolic societies where crime is virtually non-existent.  Humans, Tleilaxu, the Bene Gesserits, and the Ixians being what they are, however, hatch rebellions and assassination plots to break the chains of perceived oppression placed upon them by the God Emperor.  And all is not well in Leto’s conscience, as well.  Having sacrificed his mortality and body, he still experiences emotions that are all too human inside his worm visage. The pain of knowing he oppresses society for its own good (“A parent must be generous as well as severe.”) combined with a longing for love and acceptance despite his self-imposed alienation, bring his omniscient powers down to earth.  But as events in the Dune universe evolve, Leto’s personal suffering and the schemes plotted against him must come to head. 

It is perhaps these two premises which make God Emperor of Dune interesting.  Firstly, how to topple a prescient, all knowing god-like leader, and secondly, is it possible people need such an omniscient “parent” to guide, limit, and control their otherwise all-too-human behavior?  Are we truly a safe, benevolent society when things like destructive weapons and complete freedom—elements of our own creation and desire—exist?  The first idea obviously more entertainment based, the second, however, provides excellent food for thought that flies in the face of much libertarian thinking these days.  Dune is a series of big ideas, and God Emperor of Dune may just contain the biggest.

Thus, from a thematic point of view, Herbert continues his exploration of power, politics, and the evolution of human social structures.  Leto a tyrant by choice rather than instinct, his ability to see generations down the road as well as live that time, while isolating, puts him in the position to know what is best for humanity: the Golden Path.  That humanity can only see the decades rather than millennia in front of them creates a conflict of interest that Herbert explores in not perfect but satisfying enough fashion. There are no viewpoints into the “common citizen’s” mindset regarding Leto’s rule, but how the various rebels express their feelings about the Big Worm seem enough.  The conclusion that humanity may not know what is best for itself even when slapped them in the face with it seems a fair appraisal.

Unfortunately, Herbert continues to press his agenda with a ten-ton hammer: the diatribes on power and religion continue, including the chapter-opening epigraphs.  For example:  “Technology breeds anarchy.  It distributes these tools at random.  And with them goes the provocation for violence.  The ability to make and use savage destroyers falls inevitably into the hands of smaller and smaller groups until at last the group is a single individual.”  Those who’ve read the previous books are well familiar with such blunt, generalizing statements, and if you weren’t bothered before, you won’t be bothered now.   Just be informed it continues, though given the plot setup it does seem more fitting this time around; Leto II and his 3,500 years of life may actually be an experience which can make such statements.

Though the self-styled philosophizing carries on, Herbert nicely reins in the plot of God Emperor of Dune to a degree far more plausible than the two previous novels.  The “new” setting and political arrangement putting a fresh face on the series, the story is able to focus on character issues within a story that lacks the unnecessary complexity, and therefore problems with plot cohesion found in Dune Messiah and Children of Dune.  Events unfolding at a natural, even pace, the storyline of God Emperor of Dune is a more satisfying, enjoyable read.  Thus, those who enjoyed the fast paced, multi-part interaction of those two novels may be disappointed by the “slow” pace of the fourth book in the series.  It does, however, have fewer loopholes.

In the end, God Emperor of Dune is the strongest book in the series to date save the fresh, original power of Dune itself.  Herbert throttling back on the number of interwoven storylines and focusing more on the personality and character conflicts innate to the setting the story finds itself in 3,500 years after the reign of Paul Mua’dib, the resulting novel is richer in personal reflection, the realism of the plot likewise benefiting.  The over-handed philosophizing on realpolitik and religion continues, but does not have the same jarring qualities as Dune Messiah.  In fact seeming to fit the scene and character setup of a “god emperor” better, I now know why the commenter stated that the first three books are just a build up to the fourth.  I will someday continue to the fifth, Heretics of Dune

(This review has also been posted at www.fantasyliterature.com)  

9 comments:

  1. I have only read these in Dutch. Need to change that sometime. Personally I liked the fifth and sixth book best and the fourth least but it has been many years since I read any of them.

    What I thought intriguing about the chapter-openings is that they frequently contradict each other. I didn't really perceive them as Herbert preaching.

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    1. Looking at that larger picture, is Dune a series where the author passed away before being able to complete the vision, or does the sixth book bring it to a close? It's entirely possible that I will need to adjust my opinion of the series if the latter books do indeed complete a whole thought.

      Regardless, there can be no denying that power, politics, and religion are the subjects so (heavily) under discussion - contradictory or not. :)

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    2. That is a hard question to answer without giving away some of the content ;)

      Hmm, he had one more book in mind that was eventually written as two books by Herbert and Anderson.

      The sixth book is an ending in a way but one question looms over the whole novel and Herbert had intended to answer that in the seventh book. Personally it never bothered me that there was no book seven until after I read the travesty that Herbert and Anderson turned it into. I strongly suggest that you do not pick those up. Heretics and Chapterhouse are well worth reading though.

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  3. Well as usual , those who can't create, criticize. you only wish that you were as great a writer as Mr. Herbert was Jesse. book and film critics are among the top ten most useless people on earth

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    1. What then does that say about someone reads and comments on the top ten most useless activities on Earth?

      If you are just now realizing how close your heel is to the back of your throat, you can always get your foot back by deleting your comment...

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  4. Well as usual , those who can't create, criticize. you only wish that you were as great a writer as Mr. Herbert was Jesse. book and film critics are among the top ten most useless people on earth

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    1. And yet here you are, eagerly testing what they have to say.

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  5. The Golden Path is amazing. The survival of the human race. Nothing more. Nothing less. Ixians developing a machine weapon that indiscriminately kills organic life, in Leto’s visions. Keeping humanity planet bound and stagnant for 3,500 years, builds a need to release and “scatter” and it’s a shared experience for every human alive across the populated universe. The scattering made it impossible for any bad event to wipe out all humans everywhere. Genius. Though I do have the benefit of having read the sequels.

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