Much agreement. Dune is certainly one of the best SciFi novels - as long as one is extremely careful not to read any of the prequel/sequels.
Or the "interquels" (best word we could come up with for the atrocities
Paul of Dune and
Winds of Dune). Trust me - Paul Atreides did NOT run away from Caladan to join the circus when he was 12 (and he wasn't born on Kaitain either, dammit!). There's NO way you can square these with Duke Leto's statement that the trip to Arrakis is Paul's first trip off-world. The only way KJA/BH managed was to say in
Paul of Dune that
Frank Herbert's ORIGINAL novel,
Dune itself, is nothing more than a
propaganda tract written by Princess Irulan!
This is total BS, of course, and is KJA's way of saying <expletive, with elevated middle digit> to the older fans who keep calling him out on the mistakes, inconsistencies, retcons, and total disregard for the internal rules Frank Herbert established for the series.
It's not about tastes, it's about how you define science fiction. Dune is light on the science side. Also, it's not for everybody - many of my friends couldn't get over the... ruthlessness of it. Even the 'good' characters in Dune are cold, ruthless bastards by the standards of our society.
One of Frank Herbert's intentions was to show how blindly following heroes is dangerous, because they are merely humans, with the capacity to become perverted reflections of what they once stood for.
I would argue, however, that Chani is one of the "good guys" - and the only ruthless thing she does is kill a Fremen who tries to challenge Paul's leadership. Her reasoning is that she didn't think he was worth Paul's time to dispatch himself - and to convey to any other hotheaded Fremen that if Paul-Muad'Dib's
woman could kill a male Fremen warrior, how much harder would it be to kill Paul-Muad'Dib
himself?
Agree, if you add "with princesses". Just remembered Irulan, aww.
Princess Irulan is certainly not the "aww" sort of royalty in the novels. She is definitely cold and ruthless, and extremely mean and spiteful. In the TV miniseries, however, she's presented in a much more sympathetic,
human way, and I've come to see this character in a new light as a result.