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God Emperor of Dune

Front Cover
139 Reviews
G.P. Putnam's Sons, 1981 - Fiction - 411 pages
Fourth book in the Dune series. Takes place 3500 years after the events of the original trilogy. Tells the story of Leto, the son of Paul Atreides, who has traded his humanity to become an immortal sandworm of Dune.

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Review: God Emperor of Dune (Dune Chronicles #4)

User Review  - Eric Allen - Goodreads

God Emperor of Dune Book 4 of the Dune Chronicles By Frank Herbert A Dune Retrospective by Eric Allen What do you say about the book that was so completely terrible that it so turned you off of the ... Read full review

Review: God Emperor of Dune (Dune Chronicles #4)

User Review  - Katrina - Goodreads

I hated this book the first time I read it. Hated every person in it, did not understand why anyone acted the way they did. Now it's one of my top-ten comfort reads, and I see so much in Leto I want ... Read full review

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Contents

Section 1
11
Section 2
15
Section 3
22
Copyright

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Dreamer of Dune: The Biography of Frank Herbert

About the author (1981)

Frank Herbert worked originally as a journalist, but then turned to science fiction. His Dune series has had a major impact on that genre. Some critics assert that Herbert is responsible for bringing in a new branch of ecological science fiction. He had a personal interest in world ecology, and consulted with the governments of Vietnam and Pakistan about ecological issues. The length of some of Herbert's novels also helped make it acceptable for science fiction authors to write longer books. It is clear that, if the reader is engaged by the story---and Herbert certainly has the ability to engage his readers---length is not important. As is usually the case with popular fiction, it comes down to whether or not the reader is entertained, and Herbert is, above all, an entertaining and often compelling writer. His greatest talent is his ability to create new worlds that are plausible to readers, in spite of their alien nature, such as the planet Arrakis in the Dune series.

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