![]() ![]() Can the fortune-tellers of Dune really affect the future, or are they only catching glimpses of a destiny that already awaits them? That’s what this book is really about. You see the ramifications of his decisions, and you get quite a bit of pontificating about the nature of fate. What is Messiah about? Set 12 years after Dune, Messiah is about the world Paul-Muad’dib set in motion in the first book. Dune is an all-time sci-fi classic, unimpeachable thanks to its vast influence over other a broad range of media. Messiah is a bit of a dividing book, but then again so are all the books that followed Frank Herbert’s Dune. Review #2 Dune full series audiobook in series Dune Saga You’d be selling yourself short if you didn’t continue reading the series. One of the greatest joys I take from this series is how much I learn, and Frank Herbert has a lot to teach and expound upon through his characters. But it also reveals many new ideas and teaches new things to the reader. I found Dune Messiah to be a near-perfect sequel that greatly expounds on ideas that were introduced in the first book. Everything about this book just kept propelling me forward. The conspiracy surrounding Paul’s Imperium is most compelling, the thoughts and discoveries from our beloved characters are engaging, and the philosophy that Frank Herbert communicates through his story-telling is even more thought-provoking than the first book. It shows the internal struggle and isolation of a man (Paul) and his sister (Alia) being treated as god-like figures, but Frank Herbert does a great job reminding us that they’re still human, which makes them relatable and easy to empathize with. But wait, how is that possible? Paul Atreides, Muad’Dib, a trained mentat, the male equivalent to a Reverand Mother, the Kwisatz Haderach who can see endless possibilities, doesn’t have all the answers? This is why you should read Dune Messiah. In a brilliant way, nothing happens the way you think it’s going to happen, not even for our protagonist, Paul Atreides. He takes the “messiah/heroic archetype” and flips it on top of its head. What to say about Dune Messiah that hasn’t already been said? Well, it turns out Frank Herbert was making controversial decisions before George RR Martin. Maybe its because I bought the first book at Barnes and Noble? But the smaller and more compact size is actually quite nice and feels like you’re breezing through pages faster. The only thing that might be off-putting is that the sequels don’t match the same size as the first book. Does the possibility invite trepidation from hard-core series enthusiasts? Absolutely.First off, the cover art for this series is amazing. ![]() It may very well be that Dune 2 will surprise new enthusiasts alongside long-time fans with new, fresh material (such as an inexplicable man-spider) neither in the 1984 version, the 2000s version, nor the book series itself. Related: How Dune, GOT, and House of the Dragon Are More Similar Than You Think ![]() Fans were left to wonder.huh? The only logical explanation is that since Dune released around the same time as Venom: Let There Be Carnage (2021), Spider-Man: No Way Home (2021), and slightly after Miles Morales' foray in Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse (2018), this was a producer in-joke or a subtle criticism of Marvel's beloved web-slinger, completely pointless though it might have been. This mutant spider-man appears in Dune simply to be disregarded after a central character states that the hybrid is not dangerous. The disquieting, disturbing, and disgusting creature has nothing to do with any prior film or the series whatsoever. Specifically, the first Dune featured an enormous black spider with human hands and a human face. What fans could be surprised by in Dune 2 is (like in the first Dune) the appearance of non-canonical materials. ![]()
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