46 Books
See allFeatured Prompt
3,954 booksWhen you think back on every book you've ever read, what are some of your favorites? These can be from any time of your life – books that resonated with you as a kid, ones that shaped your personal...
Contains spoilers
This is a book I was not sure how I felt about until I finished it. It's confusing, and the story gets messy, but Paul's entire arc hooked me. I think the biggest thing holding this book back for me, at least on the first read, is how complicated the Duncan Idaho plotline is. I really didn't understand much of it until the end, where things finally clicked. Maybe that was the intent? Also, the whole romance between him and Alia felt so forced, and just kind of came out of nowhere. Paul's visions and intent were also very unclear, but I liked it as it really put me into the shoes of the other characters.
Overall, a fantastic conclusion to the story of Muad'Dib. Definitely a book I'm going to reread.
I'll probably get to Children of Dune in a little while.
I picked up this book because I noticed the absolute lack of Indian Literature in my reading list. As an Indian, I wanted to see what authors from my home could offer, and I was not disappointed. The story was emotionally gripping and the amount of themes it tackles is impressive. I really felt for the characters and their plight. The ending in particular was heartbreaking.
Highly recommend to anyone interested in reading modern Indian literature.
An absolute scare, filled with characters that you grow to both love and fear. This book and Kubrick's adaptation of it are probably some of my favourite pieces of media. Vastly different takes on the same story, yet still profound in their own, special ways.
just a really great read. Funny, emotional, thrilling, just fantastic in every way. Some parts were a little hard to follow for my dumb little brain, and it was a taaaaaaaaaaad cliche in some ways, but just such an excellent read nonetheless.