Tuesday, March 16, 2021

Mentats of Dune by Brian Herbert and Kevin J. Anderson

 

(pb; 2014: second book in the Great Schools of Dune trilogy)

From the back cover

“Gilbertus Albans has founded the Mentat School, a place where humans can learn the efficient techniques of thinking machines. But Gilbertus walks an uneasy line between his own convictions and compromises in order to survive the antitechnology Butlerian fanatics, led by the madman Manford Torondo and his Swordmaster Anari Idaho. Mother Superior Raquella attempts to rebuild her Sisterhood School on Wallach IX, with her most talented and ambitious student, Valya Harkonnen, who also has another goal─to  exact revenge on Vorian Atreides, the legendary hero of the Jihad, whom she blames for her family’s downfall.

“Meanwhile, Josef Venport conducts his own war against the Butlerians. The VenHold Spacing Fleet controls nearly all commerce, thanks to the superior mutated Navigators the Venport has created, and he places a ruthless embargo on any planet that accepts Manford Torondo’s antitechnology pledge, hoping to starve them into submission. But fanatics rarely surrender easily.

“The Mentats, the Navigators, and the Sisterhood all strive to improve the human race, but each group knows that as Butlerian fanaticism grows stronger, the battle to choose the path of humanity’s future─whether to embrace civilization or to plunge into an endless dark age.”


Review

Set immediately after the events of Sisterhood of Dune, Mentats shows the widespread fallout of the massive conflicts that have begun to tear the Imperium apart. The characters from the first Great Schools of Dune book are back, doubling down on their mixed-solutions resolve to save humanity from its worst aspects, many of which they embody or most touch upon from time to time─few people (human or otherwise) are innocent in Dune books, and Sisterhood is no exception. This is one of the strengths of the series, its relatability.

Like previous Dune books, there’s plenty of storyline/character set-up, drama, references to other Dune events and characters (past and future), dry and sometimes dark humor, and of course sometimes-horrific action, resulting from the clashes of polar-opposite characters and even friends. Mentats jumps into the action quicker than Sisterhood does (the benefits of having everything set up in the first Great Schools novel) and its end-twists are particularly effective, bordering on masterful and shocking. This is an excellent entry in the Dune series, one worth reading.

Followed by Navigators of Dune.

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