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| | Dune Messiah (Berkley SF, N1847) |  | Author: Frank Herbert Publisher: Berkley Category: Book
Buy Used: $0.01
New (4) Used (96) Collectible (7) from $0.01
Avg. Customer Rating: 180 reviews Sales Rank: 1239184
Media: Mass Market Paperback Edition: 1st Paperback Pages: 253 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3 Dimensions (in): 6.7 x 4.2 x 1
ISBN: 0425018474 EAN: 9780425018477 ASIN: 0425018474
Publication Date: 1970 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: A CREASE ON SPINE FROM BEING OPENED OTHERWISE GREAT IMMEDIATE SHIPPING
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Product Description Science Fiction, Dune
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| Customer Reviews: Read 175 more reviews...
I was not impressed November 10, 2008 "Dune Messiah" was OK, but I was not impressed. It was a fair follow-up to "Dune". I was mainly interested in the character, Paul, not in his children. However, I was losing interest in the story by this point.
Bought it! September 21, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Okay now I have all of the Dune series from way back-but, I did go an purchase the new hardcovers with Brian Herbert's Introductions-They are so wonderful to read! The book is exquisite.
Wonderful book September 21, 2008 it's rare to find a sequel on par with the original. This one fits the bill.
Really, this is such a fine book August 18, 2008 It is the one time Frank Herbert let himself (or his editors let him) become truly literary in the series of books about Dune. It must be in the nicest sense of that term.
I remember being young, near to thirty, and reading the first time, comparing impressions with friends in the quiet, hands-on moments at our r&d work.
Perhaps we didn't feel the sweep of the original Dune, though in another way it is actually there -- behind, and in the spaces opened by many observations in the text. And it didn't seem to compare with the adventures of Leto and Ghanima and the D-wolves, though today for all that the Children of Dune book is important, it is lesser.
In Dune Messiah, the depth of individual story is drawn almost as with Asian brushes: swift, naturally spreading strokes, that you take a moment with to let the understanding come to you, how evocative. There is not summary, yet also there are summaries of whole thoughts, as in the sad ending not of Paul, but of Bijaz, whose power as a person and character just give glimpses of Frank Herbert's breadth of achievement.
I have never been able to understand the later books after Herbert died, though there can be a certain fascination in some of them, and now think that they are simply very different works, as if a very different historian had been read to us. Then there is credit where due.
Of Frank Herbert's deep and long creation, it's apparent also how he took different avenues himself, perhaps guided by editors, by 'results' for this Dune Messiah particularly. He had a life to support, and could no doubt find fun and satisfaction in putting forward what people most seemed to want to hear, all the way to Miles Teg, who was a great creation also.
Would that he could have pursued the tracks of Dune Messiah further in some places and ways, and perhaps he did -- the rest of the series I also have before me to read over. What he did here shows the soul there was behind it all, and it is a thanking matter indeed to meet him so.
Highly recommended, and as you see, for reading 'again'.
A great follow-up for fans of Dune! June 9, 2008 Dune Messiah is the second book from Frank Herbert in the Dune Series. Paul Atreides is now the Emperor/Duke of Arrakis with his Fremen wife Chani and his Imperial concubine, Irulan. In Dune Messiah, the reader starts to see the internal struggle that Paul battles throughout the book. A battle between trying to prevent the jihad from his fremen followers that he sees so much in his future vision and trying to be a husband to Chani and protecting Alia (his sister) at the same time. As with any Emperor with such a following, there are those out to make Paul's life miserable at every turn. I felt this was a much more personal book than Dune itself. It gives you a glimpse at how life is for an Emperor in such a position and the reader gets to see that Paul is infact a human being that struggles with being the possible messiah that his people and all those around him need.
Overall, an outstanding book in the Dune series and every bit as enjoyable as Dune.
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