Why should you read Dune by Frank Herbert Dan Kwartler

A mother and her son trek
across an endless desert.

Wearing special skin-tight suits
to dissipate heat and recycle moisture,

the travelers aren’t worried
about dying of thirst.

Their fears are much greater.

The pair try to walk without rhythm,

letting the vibrations of their footsteps
blend into the shifting sands.

But soon, the sound of the desert
is drowned out by a louder hissing.

As a mound of sand races towards them,

the pair’s unnatural gait
turns into a sprint.

The two clamber into a nearby rock face,

as a sandworm 400 meters long
bursts from the desert floor.

This is the world of “Dune.”

Written by Frank Herbert
and published in 1965,

“Dune” takes place
in a far-flung future,

where humanity rules the stars
in a giant feudal empire.

This medieval motif goes beyond
just the government.

Unlike most interstellar sci-fi,

Herbert’s humans conquered
the stars without any computers.

Following an ancient war with robots,

humanity has forbidden
the construction of any machine

“in the likeness of a human mind.”

But rather than stifling their expansion,

this edict forced humans
to evolve in startling ways—

becoming biological computers, psychic
witches, and prescient space pilots.

Members of these super-powered factions

are regularly employed
by various noble houses,

all competing for power and new planets
to add to their kingdoms.

But almost all these superhuman skills
rely on the same precious resource:

the spice.

This mystical crop also known as “melange”
is essential for all space travel,

making it the cornerstone
of the galactic economy.

And it only grows
on the desert planet Arrakis,

a dangerous and inhospitable world
whose native inhabitants

have long rebelled against the empire.

Arrakis, also called Dune,
is the setting for Herbert’s novel,

which follows Paul
of the noble House Atreides.

The book begins with Paul’s family
being assigned control of Dune

as part of an elaborate plot
by their sworn enemies:

the sadistic slave drivers
of House Harkonnen.

The conflict between these houses upends
the delicate political balance on Arrakis.

Soon, Paul is catapulted
into the middle of a planetary revolution,

where he must prove himself capable
of leading— and surviving—

on this hostile desert world.

But Arrakis is not simply
an endless sea of sand.

Herbert was an avid environmentalist,

who spent over five years creating
Dune’s complex ecosystem.

The planet is checkered with climate
belts and wind tunnels

that have shaped its rocky topography.

Different temperate zones produce
varying desert flora.

And almost every element of Dune’s
ecosystem works together

to produce the planet’s essential export.

Herbert’s world building also includes
a rich web of philosophy and religion.

Paul’s mother Jessica, is a member
of the Bene Gesserit,

an ancient cult
of spice-assisted psychics.

Sometimes called “witches”
for their mysterious powers,

the Bene Gesserit have operated
as a shadow government for millennia

in an effort to guide society
towards enlightenment.

Similarly ancient are the Mentats—

human computers capable
of processing incredible amounts of data.

While the Mentats are bastions
of logic and reason,

their results are not mere calculations,

but rather, streams of constantly
shifting possibilities.

However, no group is more central
to “Dune” than the Fremen.

Natives of Arrakis, they are the keepers
of the planet’s many secrets.

Paul’s journey takes him deep
into the Fremen’s exclusive brotherhood,

where he must prove himself trustworthy

in a series of increasingly
deadly challenges.

All these factions have deep histories
that pervade the text,

and Herbert also incorporates that
sense of scale into the book’s structure.

Each chapter begins with a quote
from a future history book,

recalling elements of the events
that are about to unfold.

The book also contains in-universe
appendices

that further explore the Empire’s history;

alongside a glossary of words like
“Gom jabbar” and “Shai-Hulud."

Dune’s epic story continues to unfold
over a six-book saga that spans millennia.

But every story of Arrakis’
future begins here:

as Paul pursues a path
that is dangerous, demanding,

and always on the verge of being
consumed by the oncoming storm.

一位母亲和她的儿子徒步
穿越无尽的沙漠。

穿着特殊的紧身衣
来散热和回收水分

,旅行者不
担心会渴死。

他们的恐惧要大得多。

两人试图无节奏地行走,

让他们脚步的振动
融入流沙中。

但很快,沙漠的声音
就被更大的嘶嘶声淹没了。

当一堆沙子冲向他们时,

这对不自然的步态
变成了冲刺。

两人爬进了附近的岩壁

,一条400米长的沙虫
从沙漠地面冲了出来。

这就是“沙丘”的世界。

由弗兰克·赫伯特 (Frank Herbert) 撰写
并于 1965 年出版的

《沙丘》发生
在一个遥远的未来

,人类
在一个巨大的封建帝国中统治着星星。

这个中世纪的主题
不仅仅是政府。

与大多数星际科幻小说不同,

赫伯特笔下的人类
在没有任何计算机的情况下征服了星空。

在与机器人的古老战争之后,

人类已经禁止

“以人类思维方式”建造任何机器。

但这条法令并没有扼杀他们的扩张,而是

迫使人类
以惊人的方式进化——

成为生物计算机、通灵
女巫和有先见之明的太空飞行员。

这些超级势力派系

的成员经常
受雇于各种贵族家族,他们

都在争夺权力和新行星
以增加他们的王国。

但几乎所有这些超人技能
都依赖于同一种宝贵资源

:香料。

这种神秘的作物也被称为“混杂”
,对所有太空旅行都是必不可少的,

使其
成为银河经济的基石。

它只生长
在沙漠星球厄拉科斯,这

是一个危险而荒凉的世界
,当地居民

长期以来一直反抗帝国。

Arrakis,也被称为沙丘,
是赫伯特小说的背景,

该小说跟随
贵族厄崔迪家族的保罗。

这本书的开头是保罗的家人
被指派控制沙丘

,这是他们的死敌精心策划的阴谋的一部分

哈克南家族的虐待狂奴隶
司机。

这些家族之间的冲突颠覆
了厄拉基斯微妙的政治平衡。

很快,保罗就被推
入了一场行星革命的中心

,他必须证明自己有能力

在这个充满敌意的沙漠世界上领导并生存下来。

但厄拉科斯
不仅仅是无尽的沙海。

赫伯特是一位狂热的环保主义者,

他花了五年多的时间创建
沙丘复杂的生态系统。

这颗星球上布满了气候
带和风洞,这些气候带和风洞

塑造了它的岩石地形。

不同的温带地区产生
不同的沙漠植物群。

沙丘生态系统的几乎每一个元素都
协同工作

,生产出地球上必不可少的出口产品。

赫伯特的世界建筑还包括
一个丰富的哲学和宗教网络。

保罗的母亲杰西卡是
贝尼·杰瑟里特(Bene Gesserit)的成员,这是

一个古老
的香料辅助通灵者崇拜。 贝尼

·杰瑟里特有时因其神秘的力量而被称为“女巫”,

几千年来一直作为影子政府运作,

努力引导社会
走向启蒙。

同样古老的是

Mentats——能够处理大量数据的人类计算机。

虽然门塔特人
是逻辑和理性的堡垒

,但他们的结果不仅仅是计算,

而是不断
变化的可能性流。

然而,没有任何一个群体
比弗雷曼人对“沙丘”更重要。

Arrakis 的原住民,他们是
这个星球许多秘密的守护者。

保罗的旅程将他
带入了弗雷曼人独有的兄弟情谊

,他必须

在一系列越来越
致命的挑战中证明自己值得信赖。

所有这些派系都有深厚的
历史贯穿于整个文本

,赫伯特也将这种
规模感融入了本书的结构中。

每章都以
引用未来历史书中的一段话开头,

回忆
即将展开的事件的要素。

这本书还

包含进一步探索帝国历史的宇宙附录;

旁边还有诸如
“Gom jabbar”和“Shai-Hulud”

之类的词汇表。Dune 的史诗般的故事
在一个跨越数千年的六本书的传奇故事中继续展开。

但关于 Arrakis 未来的每一个故事都
从这里开始:

当保罗追求的道路
是 危险,要求高,

并且总是处于
被即将来临的风暴吞噬的边缘。