Frank Hebert is a magnificent world builder, and a sci-fi author that really thrives off of concepts and the development of ideas and philosophies. However, his prose and his characters are not all that great - so in that sense, he's very much a classic sci-fi writer. I personally love sci-fi that focuses on ideas and concepts, and find Herbert's philosophizing about the future of humanity and its relationship to technology, spirituality, and politics really fascinating (and impressive, just the sheer amount of vision and creativity he possessed). I've read them all multiple times (they're dense and possess a lot of depth). Also, its good to take into account that the series spreads across massive amounts of time, and unlike other series, plot-wise each book doesn't necessarily have a direct or immediate connection to the books before it (once again, he focuses on history and development, sort of like an annales school approach - albeit mixed with a bit of a "great man" approach too). So if you're looking for closure with characters from the first book, you're not necessarily going to get it. And Frank Herbert ultimately died before he was able to fully realize everything. So yeah, it really just depends on what you're into and what interests you.
Mar 11, 2024

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The Seinfeld of sci-fis. A chaotic tome. A cult classic. A rearranging of the mind and the emotions. Self-serious pulp detritus interspersed within a sea of stirring philosophical musings. A pleasant plunge. A thought provoking fever dream. The most memory-holed best book of the 20th century.  Is it a novel about nothing or everything? Poetic and soul punchingly beautiful at times, gratuitously sexual and grotesque at others. Period piece or borderline problematic - or perhaps just a dose of progressive realism? Genre defying or defining? A journey, a morass, or a deluge?  All of the above.  As a sci-fi head, Dune used to be one of my go to answers when people would ask what my favorite book was (War and Peace or The Name of the Rose are others). But [*puts on asshole hat*] after everyone and their mother became dune-pilled from the movies, I needed a new answer. Dhalgren has now taken Dune's spot. And I think it's safe to say that there will never be a Dhalgren. 
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But none that I know that capture that multi style feel of Hyperion unfortunately :( Simmons was really onto something here
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