img225/7247/dunetn3.jpgOne of my current obsessions is the amazing universe of Dune, and it just so happens I recalled recently that I purchased the tome from a thrift shop ages ago, but had never gotten around to reading it — life, as they say, got in the way.

Thanks goodness I found it tucked away in a drawer. And then, after seeing the 1984 movie adaptation by David Lynch, I began to read the novel. In retrospect, it's a good thing I saw the film first, because no less than 31 pages are missing — 123 to 154. It's very odd, because I examined the spine, and while weary and cracked with folds, there doesn't appear to be a discernable gap where pages might've just… fallen out. Furthermore, the novel is replete with bizarre typographical errors: on some pages, lines of text are repeated in a smaller typeface. At first, I thought it was a deliberate effect, but seeing enough of them has me thinking otherwise.

Besides the oddities, however, I'm up to page 248 now, mostly read in my spare time. What a great book it is! My edition was printed in 1975, shortly before Children of Dune of the original trilogy came out, and one phrase I note on the back cover which really stands out is how Dune is described as "imaginative literature".

It's easy to see where a lot of later sources, and sci-fi tropes — apostrophes and hyphens in alien names, feudal societies in space, effectiveness of antiquated weapons in the future, sandworms, unified religions, etc. — got their inspirations.