Sands of Dune (4/5)
Sands of Dune, not to be confused with Winds of Dune or Sandworms of Dune, takes place mostly on the planet Dune, which has lots of sand dunes, where numerous people have gone to meet their, um, doom.
Alright, snark aside, this is a collection of Dune novellas set across the timeline, though mostly around the events of Dune proper. It's kind of instructive reading this, because my experiences with said novellas were mostly positive. Indeed, I've read far more of Expanded Dune than Original Dune, if we're using such terminology. However, no matter how good the writing may get, it still falls short of Frank Herbert's work when it comes to writing style. I've commented on Anderson's style before (I say Anderson because his Dune works are so similar in style to his original works that I'm convinced that he's doing far more writing than Brian Herbert), but basically, his style is functional, while Frank Herbert's is more lyrical. Or, rather, it's like comparing reasonably well written, albeit generic sci-fi, with a book that's considered a titan of the genre. Being someone who writes fanfic in part due to the knowledge that I'll never be good enough to be published, I can kinda sympathize, but be that as it may, how do the novellas stack up?
The Edge of a Crysknife
The story focuses on Shadout Mapes (if you had to look up who that was, I don't blame you) about 60-plus years before the events of Dune. As a Fremen commando (there's an in-universe term I forget), the story deals with the Fremen fighting back against Harkonen forces, which is basically how they roll - the Imperium sends in a house to Arakkis, the Fremen force the house to withdraw, the Fremen sends in another house, rinse and repeat (or don't rinse, given how scarce water is). The story concludes with them forcing a Harkonen to retreat, with Vladimir Harkonen turing up at the end in a "meet the new boss, even worse than the old" moment.
Edge is pretty much emblematic of what I said. As a piece of sci-fi schlock (guerilla warfare, lots of knives, guns, etc.), it's completely fine. But that's all it is - fine. I just don't have much to say about it.
Blood of the Sardaukar
This is a weird one in terms of structure, and even weirder in terms of inspiration. Basically, a sardaukar colonel from the original book who's ordered to ensure that the death of Leto Atreides isn't drawn out is the POV character. Which is fine, sure, but a large chunk of the novella is dedicated to psudo-flashbacks. As in, the character spends a significant chunk of time reflecting on his backstory, but it all occurs in the present, rather than a flashback being written. So you get this weird scenario where the bulk of the story is rather backstory, rather than the story itself, if that makes sense. Anyway, the story's fine, I guess - the depiction of Sardaukar training is okay, but honestly, having a Sardaukar POV character who's pretty much a normal guy seems off. Given that the Sardaukar are meant to be the best of the best (or worst of the worst), it seems coutner-productive to humanize them, even in a CO position.
The Waters of Kanley
I didn't read this going through as I read (and reviewed) it by its lonesome awhile back. The TL, DR version is that I think WoK is quite good.
Imperial Court
This is probably the weakest of the bunch, where Anderson's basic writing style becomes even more basic - in the Schools of Dune Trilogy, remember how the characters will often reference the "evil thinking machines?" Yeah. Think of that. Anderson seems to have an allergy to any adjective except the most basic ones, and FYI, the road to hell is paved with adverbs, NOT adjectives.
Anyway, this story is the freshedest in my mind by virtue of having read it last. It takes place 97 years after the Battle of Corrin, and about ten years after the formation of the Spacing Guild. There's a new emperor on the throne who needs a chamberlain position filled, and among the candidates are individuals from House Atreides and House Harkonen. Having liked Schools of Dune overall (OVERALL, mind you), the proximity to the timeframe helped, but basically, the Harkonen guy frames the Atreidies guy, the Atreidies guy dies, while the rest of House Atreidies swears revenge (continuing a cycle of vengeance that began 100 years ago, and will still be going on 10,000 years later), while the Harkonen guy is betrayed by his own cousin as part of the plot. It's a twist you see coming, but the betrayal is actually pulled off decently, so I'll give it that. But again, writing is basic, storytelling is basic, it's just, well, basic. The novella as a whole gets a 4/5 from me, but make no mistake, Imperial Court really drags things down.