If you’re searching for books like Dune, you’re not chasing sand and spice.

books like dune hero image with a sand walking being and city in the distance

You’re chasing systems of control.

Empires that don’t just rule territory
they shape belief, behavior, and destiny.

You felt it in:

• the slow manipulation of bloodlines
• the precision of the Bene Gesserit
• the way prophecy becomes a tool, not a truth

Dune isn’t really about Arrakis.

It’s about what happens when power becomes invisible enough to feel natural.


Starzel meets that instinct and removes the last layer of comfort

In Dune, control is vast and still identifiable.

You can point to it:

• Houses
• Religion
• Spice
• Strategy

In Starzel, control is harder to locate.

It no longer sits outside the individual.

It operates through:

• perception
• identity
• internal stability

You don’t resist it with armies.

You resist it. If you can by holding onto a self that may already be shifting.


Where Dune gives you a center, Starzel takes it away

One of the quiet assurances in Dune is this:

There is still a center of gravity.

A figure. A force. A point around which the system turns.

Even when power is overwhelming, it still feels navigable.

Starzel removes that.

There is no stable center.
No chosen trajectory.

Only a system that no longer needs to declare itself to function.


The evolution of control: from external dominance to internal design

Dune shows you how power shapes the world around you.

Starzel shows you how power reshapes the world inside you.

That shift changes everything:

• conflict becomes psychological before it becomes physical
• resistance becomes uncertain before it becomes impossible
• reality itself becomes unstable

You’re no longer asking who controls the system.

You’re asking whether the system has already defined you.


Why readers of Dune land here and stay

Because the real hook in Dune was never the setting.

It was the recognition that:

Power is patient.
Power is strategic.
Power works long before it’s seen.

Starzel continues that line of thought and pushes it further.

Past empire.
Past prophecy.
Into something colder.


Read this if what stayed with you wasn’t the story, but the implication

Read this if you want:

• systems that don’t announce themselves
• control that operates without spectacle
• a narrative where certainty erodes instead of builds

Read this if Dune made you think
and you suspected the real story wasn’t finished.


Final line

Dune reveals how power takes hold.

Starzel asks a harder question:

What if it already has?

Starzel book cover image of a statue the woman in black mysterious and haunting

STARZEL A Psychological Thriller

Readers Also Enjoy These Archive Articles

Books Like The Three-Body Problem Where the Threat Isn’t Out ThereBooks Like Clockers or In The WoodsBooks Like Hum

IMD Operations

Follow Mark Bertrand on Bluesky