And Now, a few words about DUNE.
Not all young boys get into Science Fiction as they hit puberty. Sporty boys carry on playing football and stuff out in the fresh air, and get all athletic and fresh faced and handsome, in an intensely dull fashion.
I was not a sporty boy, and for me, puberty was a strange and terrifying experience. For a start, I had about three of them. But that is another story.
I spent a lot of time indoors, reading books, my area of expertise since I was very young. One of the books I read was Dune.
I read Dune at exactly the right time. I read "Catcher in the Rye" When I was eighteen, and thought that I really should've read it when I was sixteen, just as I saw "The Breakfast Club" (Ungh - Molly Ringwald - HNNGH) when I was twenty, and felt that I should've watched it when I was eighteen.
I was thirteen, and Dune blew my tiny human mind. But then, Dune is pretty much designed for pubescent young boys.
It centers around Paul Atreides, the young song of Duke Leto Atreides. The House Atreides are caught in a deadly game of Machiavellian manuveuring and Byzantine politics beween the Landsraad Noble Houses, The CHOAM group, and The Padishah Emperor.
Right from the get go, I was given a hero I could easily identify with, in a situation I could broadly recognise - A Young Man Adrift In An Adult World.
But Wait! It gets better! But I don't want to spoil any of it for those of you who want to read Dune, based on what I have already told you. Honestly, it is brilliant, even if you aren't a thirteen year old boy, baffled by testosterone.
So I'm going to spoiler the next bit. Which is ace.
Not all young boys get into Science Fiction as they hit puberty. Sporty boys carry on playing football and stuff out in the fresh air, and get all athletic and fresh faced and handsome, in an intensely dull fashion.
I was not a sporty boy, and for me, puberty was a strange and terrifying experience. For a start, I had about three of them. But that is another story.
I spent a lot of time indoors, reading books, my area of expertise since I was very young. One of the books I read was Dune.
I read Dune at exactly the right time. I read "Catcher in the Rye" When I was eighteen, and thought that I really should've read it when I was sixteen, just as I saw "The Breakfast Club" (Ungh - Molly Ringwald - HNNGH) when I was twenty, and felt that I should've watched it when I was eighteen.
I was thirteen, and Dune blew my tiny human mind. But then, Dune is pretty much designed for pubescent young boys.
It centers around Paul Atreides, the young song of Duke Leto Atreides. The House Atreides are caught in a deadly game of Machiavellian manuveuring and Byzantine politics beween the Landsraad Noble Houses, The CHOAM group, and The Padishah Emperor.
Right from the get go, I was given a hero I could easily identify with, in a situation I could broadly recognise - A Young Man Adrift In An Adult World.
But Wait! It gets better! But I don't want to spoil any of it for those of you who want to read Dune, based on what I have already told you. Honestly, it is brilliant, even if you aren't a thirteen year old boy, baffled by testosterone.
So I'm going to spoiler the next bit. Which is ace.
VIEW 4 of 4 COMMENTS
ive not read dune...infact i never read a book till i was about 19...
although i wasnt the sporty person either...no surprise there...i was the horrible naughty teenager