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Timothy Burke's avatar

I think the formality of the dialogue works in the sense that the Atriedes are hereditary nobility at the top of a very tall and rigid hierarchy and that the Fremen are meant to seem like an extremely formal, ritual-bound people; in both cases that makes them seem "naturally stilted", if that makes sense. There's almost no speaking characters who are "ordinary people" in any sense--say, just a regular old water-seller in the city or a spice-smuggler or a dock loader, etc.

I hear you on just skipping past some things--sooner or later I'm going to write in my re-readings about entire chunks of stuff in famous SF/fantasy works that I read when I was younger that I would just repeatedly avoid any time I read them. With Dune, I think the things that would always grab me were just the basics of the reversal-of-fortune plot--Paul's family is attacked and his father murdered; Paul proves himself to the people who takes him in; Paul hatches a plan; the plan succeeds wildly. The Chosen One mysticism surrounding that added flavor but I didn't really fully grasp the idea behind it (and Herbert didn't really explain it more fully anyway until Dune Messiah and Children of Dune anyway). Stuff like what spice was actually for, the Guild Navigators, the Sardaukar, the politics of the Landsraad, all of that didn't really sink in for me until an adult re-reading.

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