Between the end of Frank Herbert’s DUNE and his next novel DUNE MESSIAH lies a mystery: how a hero adored by a planet became a tyrant hated by a universe.
PAUL OF DUNE begins the story of those twelve fateful years and the wars of the jihad of Paul Muad’Dib.
It is an epic of battle and betrayal; of love and idealism; of ambition and intrigue. Above all, it is the story of how Paul Atreides – who achieved absolute power when scarcely more than a boy – changes from an idealist into a dictator who is the prisoner of the bureaucrats and fanatics who surround him.
‘Frank Herbert would surely be delighted and proud of this continuation of his vision.’ Dean Koontz
PAUL OF DUNE begins the story of those twelve fateful years and the wars of the jihad of Paul Muad’Dib.
It is an epic of battle and betrayal; of love and idealism; of ambition and intrigue. Above all, it is the story of how Paul Atreides – who achieved absolute power when scarcely more than a boy – changes from an idealist into a dictator who is the prisoner of the bureaucrats and fanatics who surround him.
‘Frank Herbert would surely be delighted and proud of this continuation of his vision.’ Dean Koontz
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Reviews
'[Herbert and Anderson] do a great job in investing the plot with heft and complexity and the narrative with pace and momentum, and conveying the sheer ferocity of the betrayals and duplicities . . . a rare, rattling page-turner that no Dune adherent will pass up.'
Frank Herbert would surely be delighted and proud of this continuation of his vision.
Those who long to return to the world of desert, spice and sandworms will be amply satisfied
A triumphant climax to the history of the Dune universe.
'For those of us who grew up with the world of spice and sand - how gratifying to revisit characters who felt like old friends, now brought to a satisfying conclusion.'